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eee% 
22 Se 


Hite? 


POEMS 


TARE, 


Vouumr 2 


bese 


Town Li 
called othe Town 


owns 
ravine a 

” ter of St Public W: 

ince from time to time ita down and 


and. mains and 
in laa, agharee St 
3, the 


nection with the 


ween Tu, RinoctiPr "Reauet|t 
Dp (hereinafter 


company”) of the first 


Panda _ Conboua rien or THR 
(hereinafter 
or the other part. 


Rett gree yr a the company at present 
tee the water works 


the su of water to any 
mPply rations, and @ 


described. as 


accept. Debentures 
ount of Ee ekene aie 


oF pe pureh price mon 


the said prov- 


|e 


sweater workige: ( 
tem, and also the benefit of all con- 


i into by the more 4 i 


OOo 


Articles of Agreement 


. duplicate vad ko erarsan 
pee Mer dlicctaien A 


REDCLIFF, Dik FRIDAY, DEC. 20. 1918. Newhen 61 


and the sum =* One 1 zee 


1, 


Mayor and Ge ge ce A Ne 
the said Town .of 
are hereby authorized and empower- 
ed for and on behalf of the Corpora- | perso 
tion of the town of Redcliff and under 
the Co: te Seal of the said Town 
to exeute transfers and agree- 
| ments as may be requisite for the due 
jcarrying out of the ‘said! Agreement 
to | dated the 17th fag Deve 
1912 on behalf’ Sa 


tally 


Tet for i the the 
‘or the purposo pur 
chase of the said water works iydtens 


Hundred 
$1,925) is to raised anally for the 


neers 


secure 


rot Pepe and creating a Sink- 
rts ment of said so 

THERE the eotal's mt of 
45 the total amou 

teable property of the 


the S wile 

Town of fede according to the 
last. rovined assessment roll is Six 
and Forty Thousand Dollars ($640, 


AXD WHERRAS, there is no exist- 
ing Debenture Debt of tho Town ot 
Redcliff, 


THE CORPO 
TOWN OF REDCLIFF HEREBY | the 
nd! ENACTS AS FOLLOWS: 


THEREFORE THR COUNCIL 0 
TION. OF THE 


It shall and may fey lawful for 
cliff and they 


mher, A. D., 
id Town and to 
carry out the terinsof the said 
ment aud do all things heces- 


Ae be shall be lawful for the 
tion 


rowih 


of tai ofthe 
of Pt rodentit nd he is. 

wered to cause 

bentures Of the 

issued 


hits tie Whol tae on 


cere 


id of ce par At 
n Aarne us ail to all 


‘the aigereeret of cc aeh ie 


a is of such 


Sere aria e a way of De- 
six 4,000.00) fo 


rans H.. atebor stiall | poses 


y of De- BE eli tis water wax 


a ee 


ae to by wn pf an 


Oren for and 
time this dll 


and improv ements thereon, upon the 
terms herein mentioned. 
AND Whereas the the Town is 
willing to purchpsethe same subject 
to the approval of the 

NOW THEREFORE THIS AGREEMENT 
rties hereto 


WITNresern that the. 
do mutually agree = follows: 
The Company a 


interest to and 


er with w 


the Town all their ’ 


in th 


works eystem as now in © 


ver 


five Dollars (81, 085) bi ls to Ga ralsed'an- | therewith ‘bind “Aloo We land heey 
nually for Lt sa of interest during | described, togother with the buildin 
the currency ofthe said Debentures, 


burgesses, 


to sell to | 
t, tithe and 
said watts 
ration to- 
itions, ¢x- 


materials and stipplics of e 
pies thich may be tho pec 


the Company on the first weirs Peb- 
rary, A.D, 1013, for use by them in| bear 
connection with the said water works 
of |syatem,. and also the benefit of all 
contracts entered into by the Com- 
Beny f for the supply of Le to ay 
on, or 


TSOnA Or Ci 


9, Neen sum of Poaneeer rLeen Thousand | | 


Ht $14,000, 
3. jars ( ) 


chase price of t 


to 


The Company further agrees to | Said 
accept Debentures of the Town té the 
amount of Fourteen Thousand :Doll- 
lars ($14,000) in pers of the pur 
eas : nt water bi bn 
em, plant, machinery, su es 
and land above agreed in 


ve sold and 


atthe to uecept the said Debentures 


par value. 


Thc Company agrees. to accépt 


alli the Debentures of the Town to the 
amount of Fourteen Thonsand Dol. 
lars ($14,000) as aforesaid * . iy 


the first day of Februa 
and to deliver over to t 
said water works system cae 


ed all plant, su 


the st 


nd imachin- 


id, freed and discha' 
hen mall enounibrances of every. kind 
to execute to the ‘own a 


atasenrly a date as 


the Halt in Buin across ‘the sbeeet There is no truth intherumor 


tien the 


jor to the 


The, Town further 
assume all liabilitics of the. Suni 
y in receipt of the contracts en- 


the frst day of Fe 
oat be. or 


has affine | 
d the hands o} 


tures the sum 


BS By 


bruary, 


4 into by the ie Compauy, rior to}: 


for the 


¢ | supply of water: nal any Pereon, Per | vary; 


Bodin ES Wuerzor the Coin- 
has hereunto affixed its. co 


teeth 


te, on of eae =! 
: fthe Mayor and aed | 


-Treasurer thereof on the da 
terest | and year first above. WAetta, . 


set out 


bebe and jr ar t 
‘Thousand 


poll 


ee 


ae 


op a Pind every success. 
by oy Rep- aeee 


‘ve laf J.P. Ilman, of Moncton; N. 


lelif 


route in the 


* tant on the thirtieth day of De-| More concer rned ina “mill” of 
cember, D, 10% 


wf ic aos of Dace 


S Visit store and select y; 
of | Christmas cakes ‘easy. “Kea, "Sra | 


perpen A is now em- 
operator 


ee a 


[PURCHASES SOUTH 
TOWN STORE 


Cotijora Bi ofthe Town of Redclift| \ 
@ is hereby authorized and em- 

to cause any number of De- 
of the said Corporation to be 
Pa executed in the 
nts of Bente than ae Hun pene 

each an sui 

of Fou honeahd Dollars $14., : Mvll. A. Iveland has again 
perms ch ald Delaatares hal be Xmas will bo over by the! gone into business, this time 
tion ae the Town of Redcliff and|timel am next in cold blooded | buying the Smitnson grocery 


Saertbaet o a aul pone oF yo NN (probably 40 below zero blood-} store in the south endof town. 
Soa Seal thereof. ed) type, so T will wish you all) Mr, Smithson was compelled to 


That the said Debentures shall ry, joy “ollieki 8 ‘ : : 
tier arg upon Sein aiete pavanie a merry, joyous aud rollicking /sell on account of ill health. 


bP sabe fa ae Kies me first day | Christmas‘and may “peace on 

10 at the office of th » . ” “a 
Hedcift braiich af the Imperial Dane pa esa will to men” pre 
of Cana vai 

4. That are tala Repiaterse shall -_— 
at tho rate of five r 

Tee Abbum, -payatlo veut T used tohang up my sock 
on the day of February in each) many, many years xgo on 
ope cuiing currens oe ple ovat} Xmas eve and humorous big 


of said offices of said Bank, 
Debantutes shal have attached there-| brothers would put oid pipe 
stems, cinders and other. can- 


wae Mer the for ,such erg dag: do 
rpose 0 a 

Berks created ib Tabet died fruitinit. [I don’t -do it 
Seemes Myctlae (9) WOOO) ahaa Oe any more, but if any of’ my 
raised annually and be'levied and col-| lady friends wish to remem- 
property ofthe aid Town of ie ber me send care of Chief of 
rate in addition to all! Police or Jamie Green. 

Se rates during the continuance of 
such Debentures for payment of such 


interest and for the ultimate payment| If my notes shguld not ap- 
os such Debentures. 


6. This By-Law shall come into | Pee during the New Year 
force on the day of the final Passing | ‘bust off” consider my best 


if. | wishes ns read: 
q. The votes of che rgesses 
the said Town eae shall te “The bell are ringing the old year. out 
Say vol this oie on the sixth} And the New Year in.” 


He forencon and continu Tut, Tut, another blooming 
afternoon of Milestone on the pathway of 


“fee the -o ahaa br a life. 


China, crockery and glass w: 
Christmas, at Keats’, thie areal. 7 


Visit our store and select 
So gag cakes early, Keats’, Turd 


—_— 


Wanted—Woman wants to 
to take care of cleanin offites, 


room’ or stores. Address 
Review office, 5 


WAHT TO SAY ABOUT 
REDCLIFF 


Redcliff is situated on th 
of the ©, P. R., 173 miles dest diane 


gary, on the bank 
wan river. nk she, Senate 


— 


Natural gas’ is probably Red 
first aud greatest je oe waitin tae 


many be — for manufacturing pur- 


ae 


Working coaliwines on both 
ofthe river, and immense pauls 


, cliff Hotelin the Town|that Jack Crozier is the new |?Pping out yet unexplored. 


via ho a Hatcher shall| “white man’s hope. "John is 


Brick and other cla rod es 
manufactured watena ae mene om 


aa of shale being found 


3, at 10 o'clock in| another kidney, viz_a new pug 
at the os for Gowneit Meetings inill which he is putting up io 
the purpose of appointing ns | the Brick Company's plant, 
: polli ce an he 


Soomtumaadl 


Silica sands abound, t 
ve proven an cet 


bgp of tho votes, by on The mosquitoes are appar- 
ren gd op-| ently still troublesome around 
rer shall{the Imperial Bank, Mr./¢ 
€ the p used for the Meet-| S_-m—p—: i 
of the Coumeil at 10 o'clock in the pmn—p-tein welll has’ his 
oon on the seventh day of Jan-|Screcn door on, : 
1918, to sum up the number o! 
renee given for and against this By: 


fsa i sites are donated to new 


felon 


product, 


China, crockery and glass ware for 
Read iby Senge Abie serena Obeiatrnas, at santo een Surrounding ter 
a i} “Albaut that’ odd whith sanoki | Mit Biman Dm 
ree Darna Harry, be a sport and trot it iu the world than 


out. A 5s 
: REDOLIFF ALREADY HAS ; 
Two plants for making brick and 
clay products, the demand for which | 
act to their more. theatriéal | 's increasing constantly... , 
surroundings next week. Don't Se 


orget the big hop Xmas eve] ,A arse its es prhinligys end 
jand the first pay box night enlarge. thelr: the plant. ‘the ve ellos 


‘Thursday. Have your hgst|¥°*" 
“doner’ on hand Billy. = 


4 —— > 


_| That Clare turkey shoot is 
Monday. Get in some eran- 
berry sauce and land a “bub- 


sy ve = McLACKLAN, 
‘Treasurer. 


Read for a socond time thle seven-| The “movies” do the flitting 
teenth day. é December, 1912. 
DWAD C. Simin, : 
- eee McLACALAN, 
Secretary- ‘Treasurer 


——— 


A flour mill stint a “i ait 
bushels of wheat a 
bushels per year, 


As fine a three-s' 
hotel as th re is i 4 
bly.” Further Ryerss large addition now nie ce with x 


eo Tom, the C.P. R. fi 
PICTURES MOVE _ eohigpels Saat ae Three heishaorifisk “Merchants 


Society Item: m Frank Brough-| 4 Royal. 
ton and Billy Harvey will be} 4 4 
“at home” every night during ae hue, new th 2 a ah deemed 
Xmas week, excopt Monday, mp Be i Wf ve 
‘ water wor 
Pet ontor taldmnanges’ which . have Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs water pure as the mo mountain springs. 
day, Friday and Saturday. 
givena vast amount of pleas- 


ure to the people of our town,| Britannia “js worth her adn excelent fee eng rom 
will in the tuture he. presented | weight in diamonds! s 
atthe new theatre whieh is} This is not a coal mine joke.| O° Protestant hp o Chores 
rapidly nearing completion 
eur Broudway. The manage 
vi of the house on the hill 


aiodee A wag one a i 
are. giving an i atration : aie ttt 
dance pee a0 eve and the fine DEATH OF {window gh glass. 
orchestra from — Dreamland . TEW i nee bom rng mile sit bolt 
theatre in Medicine Hat will} 


bo responsible for the tickling] Mrs, Agnes A. A: Tew, wife of Se 
of the stn on al 0 George A. beter ey: sine of | REAL EavATS. 


The curtain was rung down 
on the moving picture shows at 
epic Maple Leaf Hall on Tues- 
of day night, and these delightful 


China, crockery and } ware for Te 18 AL ¥ COURSE oF CON- 
Christmas at Keats’, Third etreet. 


nights a = to commencely M 
with, The Review wishes the] Biuglo, Png 

new temple of enjoymentiyeurs of age. She oame to 
Redeliff last July, and had been 
_jilkever sinee bey artival, ‘The 
deecased had no children. ~ 


|B. who arrived in Redeliff 
er the © Pelt ciation 
Cc P.R. 


Se 


4 


requirements of as great a demand as - 


oy 


— Pal 


The Imsiness honser and resid ” 
are broctineny all of eirk—Rome 


pads 


‘ 


i A REVIEW, REDCLIFE, ALBERTA: ere a 
#6 The Plan That Falled: 


6, 7. P: CONSTRUC-ION 


Large Force of “Men. to be Employed 
Thie Winter on Western Extensions... 

In‘a recent interview, Mr. Morley, 
Donaldson, vice president and, general 
manager of the Grand Trunk Pacific 


AGONTES OF He was a dear old professor, very _ {ARE YOUR HANDS CHAPPED ? 


learned and very absent-mind 
_GALL-STONES the latter tralt of hie Was erie ‘Zam-Buk wit ¢ Chu Them. 
getting: him into hot water, — 


SANOL |e the ; Moet Rellable and) did not worry him so much as ey 
Rapid Cure for this Painful and | one, fact that He could never find his 


‘Dangerous Disease, Strong clothes in the morning on getting UD, | gether the ould Railway thas given an interesting ac- f 
Testimonials having completely forgotten where he i Wkely to p te and get in-| Count of the progress of that road, .. : 7 : : 
rere ax a be suttorére from cy Bre them, PRET at flammation, bet kr or Dees, —. He — keel Me 4 men will Md em- if . é 
easton Pee * Directiy the broken: by a out. | ploysa the GOT, Py during’ tre vom} <“Bfftetent =i h . ‘ 
use ot BANOL the ine. dev ep e softens pira jon "eae to ee a aid, Graze or scratch, ‘or chafed and crack: | ing winter. On the «western end 2 itl heat a good sized room 


eure and remarkably rapid | in Its action, | Would. devise a clothes plan, 


} 
at seaneeie Ge aReeabelAe vot san Operation, [and H tan: someething tee eater ed by the action of the cold winds | alone 4,600 men are now at work and 


wate © One Necensa: au | before m: Ww s have pas tht 

pS psa oe UR ‘oe aod bolpa Coat on third peg left hand corner | and eros Ban ek tooo | ntuber wit nove dauceson to e008 | 
out danger tothe pationt withous | of room, watsteoat and trousers on! me pure herbal filoes:from-whloh| while, working enstwaitl from Hazel- 
rain, SBANOT, has oured hn dreds chair by bed, collar on door-handle, Zam-Buk ie prepared are 80 perfectly ton there are at present 1,700 work- 
vecous dibenon Wa {isle painful ang dan. He through key of door, vest on floor ) combined and refined that the immed-| mon on the main line. Practically 
tals from people who have thus been | by window, ouffs on bedstead knobs, | iato effect of these Zanm-Bu Greapings| all the necessary force for the sea- 
ened, Lor Ovvious reasons. we oannot | shirt of portmanteau, sock# On B88) 14 soothing, antiseptic, and healing, |sen’s operations in’ the mountains is 
Vhs tans leeen Sued Ree. oniee willing to bracket, boots outside door, professor | Pain and inflammation are allayed,| now engaged and although additional 
tell others fh confidence ‘of ‘the results of | in bed, disease germs expelled from. the|men could be set to work there will| 
Hames aI MA SRO iE eat eret ue |. This worked splendidly, and next} wound oy sore, and the latter te] be no delay even df the present num: 
(howe and will gids’ Qo so teal who | morming the dear old thing collected quickly thealed, ber falls to be angmented. Mr; Don- 
f hia wardrobe with lightning rapidity Yam-Buk is not only a powerful] aldson states that no. exact forecast 

until he game to the last item on his) nealer and akin purifier: tt 4a Ptrong-| can be made as to tlie possibility of 


even in the coldest weather. 
Economical. Burns nine hours on one 
. gallon of oil. 


Ornamental. Nickel trimmings; plain 
steel or énameled tur- 
quoise-blue drums. 


Portable, Easily car- 


finguipe, 
Tho folowtnug extract ja taken from the 


lotte rellak 1 tle- } 

mi of # well-known Toronto gentle- | jic¢ Te rushed to the bed: but it ly antiseptio and germicidal, and so | the ithe being ‘conipleted’ to the Pa- ried from _toom to 
Replying {6 your letter, I followed your was. empty. forms the ideal protection for the skin | cifle coast In 1918. Byery effort is 

CANOE Fou an \ purchased pe pettow ar) = Running his . hand through nis | against iisease germs, being itiade to expédite construction room ; ‘only 
ote eons mapa roan [1 ay scanty grey locks, he exclaimed, in} "t, quickly heals cold cracks, chaps,| but -until June. of next year it would 4 f 

way help the wale of 8. whe by do- | deep despair: , | chilblains, ‘cold sores, eto, be impossible to say what the pros- eleven ; han- 

me ho ro eg Aen | uniertuaate, i ,_ There? Now the professor is ag | Mrs, O, M, Phoen. Neuchatel, Alta. | pects of completing the line would be; dle doesn’t vet hot. 

consider It the best remoedy-eyer made, | i'm much afraid after all this plan Is) wiyfas;—'] munt tell you how pleased! The Grand Trifnk Pacific baa never ; g 

Yon have a medicine that ts worth mil- |.no nent ; Lam with Zam-Buk, My husband had! been in better shape to Imandle dts gin 

OR os, Ww Alieads Widely recognised by Mn eens ; an-old frostbite on his foot for many) share of the western crop than hae Doesn't Smoke 


Doesn’t Leak. 
Cleaned 
et. 


the medical efrorcnsion of Oahada ae A | yoare, and had tried almost every} been the case this year, About’ 36 
mpocifio come fr Mog Og known remedy without any effect, but! per cent of the crop*has already been 
the pikdder AE AIL other dieadies tue te | the first application of Zam-Buk seem-| removed to the lake ports, said Mr. 
Donaldson, and although the harvest 
has been much heavier and mueh later 
than in 1911 the proportion handled 
by our company 4s already eater 
than before, At Westport the dig 
2,600,000 elevator built by the G@.T. 
P. will be ready for use in the very 
near futaure and this will serve to al- 
leviate congestion very considerably. 
Twenty five new locomotives lave 
‘been commissioned for the western 
traffic and there has also heen’ a big)” 
increago, in the number of grain cara, 
Not so, mitch a3 a whisper of © con 
plaint las been recetved and appar-| — 
ently the grain is being taken out as 
fast as it’ can be brought In by the 
farmers, 
The constriction of the Grand 
Trunk Pacifio’s dry dotk at Prince!. 
Rupert’ is destined {n the opinion of 
experts to have an important effect 
upon the shipping ‘trade of tie Pa-! 
clile coast, . In the firat plaice when! 
the company lays up tts steatiers as 
{t does at this time of year they wilt 
be. berthed {un .Prince. Rupert pi 
F ably to ary other port and this will 
be their headquarters in consequence, 
Many of tha other coast steamers 
Which are al present forced to ro 
elsewhere for repairs and overhau‘ing 
will tie ap in future at the terminis 
ol the G,.T,P., whose now plant will 
eclipse anything of its kind upon the 
Pacific coast, heing capable of hand- 
ling 20,000 .on vessels, . Already a 
800 foot ‘pier haa been erected aan 
rapid progress ia being made upoh 
the mammoth structure, 


the presence of urie acid in the system, 9 | ed to help him go much that he peree- 
SANG is also a great and Tagg y re- vered and the sore is now cured, We 
who MN seen t pean At Bay time. ay ae : fob not be without Zam-Buk in the 
em yg will often preveht a seriguaill- 


ANOT, ¢ Ae-only. by th GANOL, . 
neerich Rs Sida Abe: PANO | reuse OF CURES AMONG HIS PU 


7 Main Street, Winnipeg, Wor sale by| PILS THAT WERE REMARKABLE 
Ht | druggiats or direct 
at $i per bottle, 


pan Buk is alao n sure cure -for 
piles, eczema, ulcers, abscesses, scalp 
sores, blood-polson, bad Jeg. eruptions, 
_ | ete, Its purely herbal composition’ 

Raw, Inflamed, Itching. Skin Is Soothed males it the ideal balm for babies and 
young children, All -druggtsts and 

stores soll Zam-Buk 600, box or post 


and Heated by 
frea from gh cf og Ca® kr congue for 


CER pp. CHASE'S OINTMENT =" ru rm, Za Gap 
aoa 


from the makers 


Barber's Itch is a form of Ringworm: tablet: 
| which, when once started, is most any EMR EN IEE EN 
Morning, said Bushiaan as he mel. an 
acquaintance traveling up to town 
on the late train, Strange meeting 
you, . You generally travel up a bit 
earlier than this, . What’s becomé of 

But you can eure Barber's tten 4ald4-the tran: you uke to catch? 
keep the skin wonderfully soft. and Oh, replied the other: that drain’s 
healthy, by applying Dr, Chase's Oint- bean taken off, 
ment, dust read what this teacher) © Yaken-off; is ittasked Mr. B,,, with 
has to say sbout the healing power of necessary “curiosity. L suppose 
Dr. Chase's Otatment. you miss it? 

Mr, Chas, C,.Pairler, Upper Caré| Not go often, a8 ueed ‘{o, came the 

quet, N.B,, writes;-—"Two years ago sweRponae.- 
While teaghing at- Shippegan.f caught See 
Barber's Itch, A friend told me Dr, An Mabe casi, is known aa Lew ts of 
Chase's Ointment would cure me, as | German desoont, and his father speaka 
beem | it had him. When I went ‘for a box] proken English, Lew pays the old 
I thought it dear,-bul when 1 found) gentlemen wont to a big art fallery 
how good {t waé I thought it cheap, recently and came home greatly ecn- 
nes se at “Not only was I cured by that single) thused. 

i box, but it also cured two of my pu} Saw a a paintlag, Louis, he said. 
pils, and tits too quickly to be he! you aid? 

ieved... One of them, # gl], had a! Yes it hae a fine one—hundreds of 
ruwiing sore on the chin, which the people looking at it, jt must haf been 
doctor had tried in Vain to cure, The! worth a hundred doilara, gure, 

other had a sore on the @ar; water What was its name asked Lew 


running out of it all the time, 1) Dot Fean tell you not, but tt: Yas a} Sere 807 pare 2 
can certify to the cure - of” these fine picture, | CLERGY OPPOSE .BABY BONUS 


cages.” Describe it to me, oe pid t, a Sho called ae into he as to 
Wherever there, id itehing skin or!}> Vell, said the old gentleman, tance ustraltan Scheme, TI They Say’ Would Merge and questioned him trecly as 

a Bore wang cay agel yak you oan vas three fellers, Won rail playing | be Incentive to Immorality Mra, ‘Hayes on tient Fay 

y Dr, Chese’a with +} the’ fife, ron > wes playing. um. .he recent. decision of the la-| 9 c 
tive assurance that the result will be} and: the: goer fade headache. Teton rernment 6 grant to the meen fo Lj og Her dog's tal}, anit, 
entirely satiafactery. The soothing, «he eee ers of all children born in Australia “What a sbanieful thing to: do 
healing power of this great ointment For Frost Bites and Chilblaine,—| » Teaternity bonus of $26 is attended , ma'am, ; 
ig tinly wonderfyl, 60c, @ box, at all} Chilblains come from undue exposure] by many moro difficulties than its iy you ‘know that the poor dog ran 
. Bulp Your “|| dealors or Edinanson, Bates & Co.,| to slush and cold and frose-bite {fom|anthors anticipated, Tho sum of away so far that he has never come 
se p 4| TAmited, Toronto, the fey winds of winter, In the treat-| $2,000,000. is tc bé distributed in tho haok—that he probably ran himself to 
_ HIDES AND FURS ———— ie nent of elther there is no better pres| present financial year, ending June 30, th? 

|° 1 telt yon, Wagely, sald Mr, Todd There than Dr, Thomas’ Wloctlc/191s-and the next year a larger sum : 
to {as they @at in the parky the way Wo- il, as it counteracts the inflammation will be sot aside, Oh, Robert. What on you gain 
by such conduct? : 
I gained a dollar from Mr, Mayes, 


ry | noying and unsightly, and most diffi- 
gour,trouble we will send book andte s-| Cult to Oure, Barbers often refuas to 
HE CANADA CANCER INSTITUTE, Lunres | ghave anyone haying this disease, for 
(@ CHURCHILL AVE. ToneNTO fear of passing It on to other custom 

: ers. 


Whenever you see a well 
hater) hand think of 


; : and relioves-the pain,’ The action of] Winance however, ia not the diffleul- 
McMILLAN FUR & WOOL Co., pan iar ‘hate Ba iek Mee te Fond the oll is instanfnneous and tts appli-/ty, ‘The stumbling block ig the ques- |. 


simple. tion of the extension of the grant to saci ehteorinceaeevebee 
Winnipeg, Manitoba of the men, Just for" instance, take} Cation !s extremely . ; ‘ 
that woman coming down the pie tial aa - ; $ to the mothers of illegitimate children. THE BEST FOR YOUNG 
= é , austere man, who was evi-| (he pri ter, in his of y 
=| Konic tool husband hae told her he) aay Stranger in those. party ex-| Lue Prime minister, in his capacity seine 


Far-Reaching Influence .. | looks porfectly charming in that out- 


treasurer has decided that the grant we : 3 
rageous get-up, lacking the stamina to CHILDREN 


shal bo indiscriminate—in- the sense 
What te meant by graft? sald the! come right out bluntly and tell her| Maine. Fe rae ge hin Bia ihe ‘ery | {hat no question as to whether the 
Snquiring forelgner, that she laoks positively ‘ridiculous, | &f tho church. and he Pe Aetee nother was married or unniarried| Mrs. Ulderio Roberse, ‘Lao Long, | 
igri gama etitel atpgreat| Blache emir, Me, Md ng | ana fo alae uae | hall "ort ny ai tothe HA, | Qu vaten "thao Da 
s : : been seen {n public without his : 
sulta in Compelling a large portion of | “°*e* : i _| Leaning over an old gontloman on his! oounell of churches—n body of Pro-led from stomach trouble and’ vomit. man in a state 
the population to apologize constantly glasses, The woman waa Mrai Todd right, ovidently an old member of the: testant deno:nipationalists. interested ing, also from 4 Uitte Irisht egy 
for not having money, eid the rematn-| congregation, he whispered: >| {2 Rocial and political questions—| completely cured i ‘Hobby of @ hotel. 
der to explain how they got it, How long has he besu preaching? | strongly resent this decision, ‘and de-| mend them to all 
een Thirty-five years, I think, nesponded clare that it is— bost medicine for and I want it quick. 


tered a church in a small town: in 


MINARD'S LINIMENT GO,, LTD: 


The churches and partiewarly the} Own ‘Tablets for my baby who suffer- as = 


excitement and dighabile ran into th he 
-1 want a room, he said to the clerk, 


No one need endure the agony of| Gentlomen,—tIn July _1905 7 was} the old man; but I don’t know exact) 44 sight on the sanctity, of mar-| Tablets are superior What room do you want? inquired 
corns with Holloway’s Corn Qure at| thrown from a road machine, injuring 4 : Aik the’ xi riage. {clues not only because they the clerk politely? 
hand to remove them, my hip and back badly and was) I'll slay then, decided i te stranger, |" 2--An eneouragoment of vice, cure stomach trouble, cotisti T want i 
Seeks” obliged to use 4 araien Bee ee gee Me must be nearly dnished. 7 Bie stimitus to be eral” f colic, oii Int peoweee guar-) But 87 is already occupied—Mulll- 
° n Bept, tr Wm, PS By eRe ad ---An: outrage on the moral senti-| anteed abso y sa that room, 
What are you doing dear? asked the Lachute urged mo to try MEINARD'S| How old 1s your bab brothey? ask] 45 er ot Fae pend @an has tha 


jitle Biss mother. as she paused to | TINIMMEN'T, which did with the most | ed ttle Tommy of a playmate, 


satisfactory reauits and to-day I am! One sear old, repliod Jonny, : 
we ee tae tee as well as ever in my life, Ah, exclaimed Tommy, I've got a 
: ; Yours sincerely, dog a year old and he can walk twice 


ed in Australia last year aboyt 7200|/a box from The Dr, Willianis’ Medi-| fey) out of the window. 
illegitimate children, A bonus of| cine Co., Brockville, Ont. . 


- 


t I know he has, responded the little 
It ts urged that are: were rogtster- or at cents| Irishman. i'm. Mulligan, and I just 


was the anawer, : coreg ee $25 per chila would amount im these The theatrical agent was interview- 
Bat my dear, Invghed the mother, Sis 149 a aL oe Ke aseee 1 hesdien Jon: | CAS $0 £180,000 which it ts suggest! put madam, aald the surgeon, after| ing Hamlet, frown, the: areaetiag. 
Yon don't know how to write, MATTHEW. x Ae ny.’ He's got twice as many legs ed imight.be far better spent in sub-| the woman had recovered consclous- His object was to secure his services 
Oh, tliat doesn't matter, mother. mar os bi ' | aidizing materntiy homes, refuges and} nogs in the hospital why didn’t you for a new play which was about te 


other voluntary agencies which ald stop ‘when the crossing policeman teld 


P - 
IAllle doesn’t know how to read. ‘The average spinster Insists that she 
“ 


is bécause sie wants to be. 


Diedain for Dignity ie pi ase yo = oe ioe 
A seot, whose name was MacIntosh, | *'#"P windows in General post of). An idle rumor never spends much 
and who was prond of the fact that | fice. His face was flushed and his) ime {n the cffice of a busy man,’ 
he was directly desvended from the | features distorted, while he tugged Piceedseeniiaginn 
chief of the clan, was haying a dis-| With his teeth at a knot in his hand-) -pyere are spola on. the sun, yet 
pute over the fare he owed to a tax|| Kerehief. — When the knot Gave WAY! some peoplo expect a small boy to be 
driver who had transported him.to his | friend, who had been watching the perfect, 


their way in this young country. have been struck by the automobile. 

eet | this storm of agitation the) What, Me stop when Jim Maginnis the. project. 
policy of the federal labor govern-| holdg up his hand? I'd lét you know 
ment remains unchanged. Mr. I'm his wife and he never saw the day 
Fisher Yevoted five minutes only to} when he could boss me. 
lis reply to the arguments of an in- _ 
fluential deputation of clergymen, who} 4, seems perfectly natural for pone 


unusual performance, stepped up and ee implored him to-stay his hand andj women to be artificial, Slay, no more, interrupted the actor, 
home Ta aM talked Joua | #8ked: What was the knot for—to re- ' A FRIEND'S ADVICE that five minutes was absorbed by a = with a lordly wave of his hand. I'l 
and harshly, and angered the High-| member something? : Something Worth Listening To {Candid declaration that the echeme) gave your money and the anices take the. part of the ki Bat, of 
“lander. Yes, to have my wife's umbrella) : ced ghee would ‘go wears on the: nen a are that you will never regret tt, course, he added, I sha’ 'expeet my 
De you know aia T ain? he. de.| mended. i | A young man was advised by a sey, Mee that he: Hol orn ig ony rv x expenses paid to Voauher 
manded, proudly, drawing filmselt up| Did you have it done: friend to eat Grape-Nuls because he wet "Er Satan tinge’ ieee mane ; acu! 
to his full height, I’m a Macintogh,| Ne; forgot the blamed thing in the] yas ony yun down from a spell of fever, | B&® rey i ate. ake ‘th sane i Good for Evil ‘S 
Tho taxi snorted, subway, Put Il remembered the knot He tells the story. ; o ‘ e8! ie o come pees ¢ “ Santer Buby Topbs pete ey 
I don’t care if you're an umbrella, | *!! Meht. ‘Last epring I had av altack of) #88!8tance of women at the most t oung Master x 
“ “ ing period of their lives and wot pare os Fecently with his. nose stream. 
he sald, _ FN have my rights, fever that left me ina very weak Gong 
c : consider them simply as smothers,” ; ing ‘ 
f So you are going to school, piy lit-| dition, 1 had to quit work; had no Duel La id vind Taclous! exclaimed his 
tle man? Well, well, And what do} appetite. was nervous and  disconr- His ‘Forlorn A pat é dele nindh Leo oe. What bier A 
mt ain" s me “ ithmetl oe friend advised to eat G It was a thrilling story at Brown Re have you been doing? : 
eadin’ an’ writin, an’ arithmetic, “A friend advised me to eat Grape- : 0 / ° , $ ‘ : 
Why, J didn't know the schoole| Nuis, but I paid no attention to him} had to tell; disaster and shipwreck} hall bat Qinieark, egueed Way ‘the fae. ” 
DoOnDDS taught those things any more. Where! and kept geting worse ag time went| bravery against odds, and wisdom ‘ Va ¥ce: dum gs, J) COnGUeroY i called’ Bases pit be 
J ? do you live? by. when all wits were scatiered—except | tte s 2 2 - mer gh as m ty A Wns Oe 
P : In that flat building? : “I took many kinds of medietne hut} Brown's! . Le Meng mea TE | oie are, Chas AS ae eed # mother, os 
b, iN i Wihieh floor do you live ont none of thom seemed to help me, My| 1 had abandoned al hope, he said, leaks 6 Belle cehae Ul aire son akmetien: > 
SA, tN | I don't know, syatem was completely run down, my| When bis narrative had run for an) ving lame ee Hey os aise bites oy pela 
Count up and see. blood got out of order from want of| hour. — It was the. most wesons el fein Tiaras | Pee o Pere, oe. 
I can't, p food, and several very large| sation linagina’ Lae f san} Fees sateen glaeda ¥ pieee | ; weed ty fathe’ y 
Youcant. J thought you sald yon] beilé broke out ou my neck. 1 was : be ¢ ” ‘an Et itanea y Migr Re a x Fad 
studied arkiametic? so weak 1 could hardly. walk, rise before : ? , f itp ed ¥ ren enue . : 
{ do, but I can't count that far yet, mone day mother ordered ‘some as ' ; p | tke ime "4 


Grape-Nuts and induced mo. to gat ee ae : =a — a e: sner-tinie saw him 


We ain't only got to ten in our class. 


Mariage may elther form one’s 
character or reform it. 


The oldest ootloges ati i vetate their 
fucuitios, 


water—tag7 catch your lamb, 


ed. latter, however. 
the fallen and those who have lost) up his hand?” Then you wouldn't ofl agen nd caren mtch Fil oexiedl in 


What's it about, anyhow. he asked. 
Well, replied the other, the play is 
a historical one: 'The scene of it is 
laid in Hngland; period, Henry VY. 
During the whole course of the piece 
the king is absent in France. Now— 


ihe at fot ce with two 
some, J felt. better and that night | i a bite ° wales hae ft " inal 
Ah, feck, “old fellow Navyen't seen er as Stay" Aids Wee’ eiennee « see : nt : 
you gince your wedding two years teadily and no have. regal: any| Jones, who wag: sit 7 ; dy te cue ‘ ie 
ago, flow goes matrimony? 4 y ene pow ba ned ; and|piusees. f r ; 4 oat orb a8 
yery well, Shanks, Bur, jove, it's fornier good health, 1 w, lieve froggy im, sharply. a . a [ror y rh th or as 
aqpentive, pcimbort the | essmaker ; “ota to nofce, he "hi Ped pity 
) a oe . ’ ic Yomm “he, little 
Bt ‘would have remained ‘single, wrontd.” La ph ca ear aes. Bes 0 oy he Wan know tf you'll 
No, no, but J would have mene, 3 tte a 
the dressmaker, ville,” In pkgs. ‘"There’s a 5 nage iT 
en : j peebie kent aroha T. tle come 


ettect unaomine: ‘take Mille Gonme 
‘eke a Mt 
J |B, stock, roy ocven times as much 


s- 


gy 


4 


ei en etait: aalleatel 


i ne aE 


Socal scaentientti en tli eae 


fee.” 


s 


teat ce a te fm 


a ‘ 
Ave Weblo, we almost Ty, , 
£0 ; 
Wes Paxton tn 
An sights with cooling 


iw 
, | 


’ 


| ite tn 


asi trust thet {b will never fail, | 
# on we fly o'er hill and dale... 


commences, 1 ; 

eo cleantig an@ 
weed grain, says the Iowa Ho: 
~he-wds rather; Putting it off is easier than 
Woman. She) yo a gteat many of us put it oi 


steed is tried anc true, 


sais, valea with -towéring hills an! 
‘high i 

We onward speed with ne'er a sigh. | 
The river winds just at our feet 


With rippling waters pure and swaet. | 


Ry 


CLARISSA MAOKIE 


, Although we composed the law firm 
ef Horley & Rogers tn the Spindle 
Bullding, my partner, Jack Rogers, and 
BH had #0 successfully solved a number 
‘@f little mysteries that we were often 
Sneed to oe matters really be- | 
sphere of the detective. | - 
“"E suppose that ts how tt Sipeesa | pa dn employed 


that one Ane April mornhig our office 
@oor opened to 


A sitees in the distance agen, » 
ith children playing on the green. | 
Th pre a cheer as we pass by, | 

th childish twinkle in their eye. 


matter In the least!" «+ fo pay. Jt would pay dollara for 
“You have not recovered the glove?" | svery hour spent at the actual Jaber of 
“No I haven't thought of it'stnce.” using the mill, besides $1 an hour 
“Did you bite the young troman?” the usé of the mill, This may seem 
“No; I @idn't Gecid@ upon ‘any of | like setting th pretty high, but think 
them. #he me EY whe favorably. | littl ‘Sake into co 
a 


The elders stop to see our steed, 
And in our fades plensure read, 
| Ag, for one moment we're in view, 
Eide tae titan. | comer ot acute protec tate ceoaubes Then speed away to soenes anew. 
* o 
admit a tall, lank, dark | Gom. She appeared bright enough, but | anything, only a small, weakly, spin- 
man of prst middie age, who gaced in. pie Ponbaa beon -p figinol 4 arenas, Teoma may live rem 
ringly at Us from mela a co @ season uce ite like or 
qulringly m melancholy black Son ‘rend inert voteadag or prod 


The city lures us with its light 
As falls the curtain on our sight, | 
We’rs home again, all safo and sound | 


eonsult both of you," begen the stran- 
ger, producing a card which bore the 
game of Mr. Melancthon Thorne, 
known to us by reputation a a@ rich }. 
man and an eccentric one, 

“Well, what can we do for you, Mr. 
Phorne?” I asked briskly, for. it was 
eur custom to appear to be 
Reels in business when aa 
matter of fiiet we had not as yet an 
extensive clientele of the right sort+ 
tho litigant sort, I should say, ~~ 

“1 have heard of your success in un- 
raveling @ number of ples, and 
¥ bave called-upon you for similar sery- 


in the country; consequently there 
ean be no. manufactures, and « na- 
tion of farmers, oven of Danish farm- 
ers, is never tich according to the 
standards of commercial countries. | 
Ireomes are small. Where the sal- 
ay of a Minister of state is only 
,750 a year. humbler individuals 
must get along on much smaller in- 
comes. But the Danes know how to 
live within their incomes and to do 
is comfortably. Denmark is as ob- 
viously happy as she is poor. 

‘Dht Danes are wise enough not to 
demand perfection. If it comes they 
can take ins{jant- pleasure therein, 
When it does not come they still are | 


Almost any one is rendy to adini{ that 


| delibérately sowing more seed of such 
‘ pests with our small.grain, but we ac- 
fa | tually avd deliberately do sow weed 
du ing rag. There és of weed that we would like mighty well 
its original color fn spots, and the glove to get rid of when we sow grain just 
appeared to have been new. ‘Thename as the thrasher cleaned it, A. little 
of the maker was there—Panwith, | cleaning with a good mill always sur- 
London.” ; prises one by taking a Ibt of weed and 


had chowed 


utes;” 


5 


the house end 


; lacid. Oonformity to rule, even 
“Yes?” Jack's tove was alert, and 1 | "hop ofa friend of mine, pay Foual ? 
. t So d 7 % Ielelelejntefafufetenelate! ough it be in. so small a matter 
twas eagog “with f{nterest. We Gearly, Pan ght j eee ; tas fixed mealtimes, does entail some 
* ; pairvog $e POINTERS FOR CORN GROW- soercion upon the natural map. 80 
i : id pe ‘ ‘ERS. punctuality is nob a Danish virtue. 
BA sy ay for aalslcabis aoe: jeu: Palen Bonmehenin oxy ae 
; ts : ’ ii) ‘Do not tall. to drain b and unalterable hours for meals. 
A “So dead that he'd never yap again.” © ft wit pay you tor sour toi S} Pay a cail when. you will end the eus- 
We t essured Pills solemnly, and [| OO Ss ‘| tom ef the country will uphold you, 
dime ee adi eg the WE Naeger sap eagle ir t it will not insure you against |: 
“Hum!” said Jack in @ 5 > bees se . nt your Eggs at table. Re 
; ronegit hain rowing corn much water needs. s follow tlie very reverso of the 
hc cereal fe ; ne. sol} mulch, II the weed, Ameritan method, and while you can 


f snacks all.the time yeu cannot 
certain that at any time you will 
find a dinner ready cooked and wait 


: iy the national food lends itself |. 
admirably both to simplicity and to 


> lake the ourm arerencuny pte 


- morning peperon Jack’s desk. 


" was stone dead on the rug : ‘ unpunctnalily.. lts ‘staple is bread 
Ulysses ent ake lnlelelelateledeteleloletelelefeletet- sna butter—in well to do houses im- 
fn the | + He there most of : Ls areryeeee : mense thicknesses of excellent butter 


and fairly thio slices of several varie- 
ties of bread. ‘The staple food of 
hthe working: classes is also bread and| 
batter, but their, builer isubad and} 
scraped, and their bread is uniform? | 
innutritious. : 

Smorrebrod: (literally butter. bread | 
or smeared bread) is | one food | 
that is to be had at all hours and | 
in all places in hotels and restaurants | 
by day or we. on steamers, in the | 
famous ‘Tivoli ‘gardetis. It consists 
of a thinnish slice of buttered bread, 
white, grey or black, on which is 


gett: a ee bagg gaia For Perforating Sed. 
Osta fidently. frace th | When lawns are to be improved a 
. so We will’ #0d perforator is a convenient impie- 
ate oftire icelte 
inch squares 
of one toch 
- board nailed to- 
gether after the 
lower one bas 
been filled, full 
of rather large 
nails, as shown 
in. the drawing, 


Hill Climbing Steamboats. / 


ate time. This 
© can be wit: | 
the 
‘ang 
can- 
in the 


p 
It 


Tonge Rares oy gi at 

yond. T pressed | ese with vers” is 9 
1 ‘ ' mighty uncomfortable creature and is 
wy ere er always an casy viclin» to fhe Influenza 
. bug. Perhaps the stable ts damp or 
las drafty, More likely it 15 lacking to 


Y Tike e a. blanc ventilation and no purifying rays of. 
tae : tie sunshine reach dts interior. In such 
ae re ae eat eee ie p Stow the foyer 
e same alr, th e- #480) ry te" 
comes starved for oxygen, Fi clr- boat is lifted 


culation is impatied. 


6 side 
as s. Eo as 
ht han ha ady 
on the Phe 
pigtegerte h an 

i. thet! ‘side was calle 
4 ie. that manner the 
a A 
t end 8 2 
para) soy ang 


Saved by the Soloist. 


- they 

Oalf Raisiig Wisdem | Why, 

A little milk ato time, but ofter, Is hee 
wisdom red' to the y in 


8 nutshell, Because a calf 


/ 


us 
ah ko. 


ea alo tay 2 hone, 


Pe a 


+ 


| would the 


” Thorne laced nd health and pleasure both have, 
Peel Wdal?* bs Geiuived es hin eyegiavnes with weisieny | tyr weeds er osamy, tovaroni res ates Seer ve 
ately. £ ane eiiiis ani pv cethcraegctan. Aoki tt ge bo LIFE IN DENMARK, | 
—n ee oe ” pwd “Tea”. uagt ; ly cabeaiten epeauees grows, and the | 4 Countr Where Almest Everybed 
Seed mn ei ors of Mn arm | louie Wee "Sat ating Stee ve wows acescninnsents |, (2 Pets But Happy. 
bi ang pn gn - he the glove. I found it presently | shriveled kernels an@ aow only the In. Denmark evefybody ifs poor. 
: necessary to and examined it with interest. plump; béavy:ones. There are no coal or mineral deposits 


0 


EATING VEGETABLES, 


A Few Valuable Pefints on. a Subject 


of General. Interest.” 
Vegetables form ae large part of the 
diet of every civilized nation, What 
ish do ,without their po 
tatces, or the Chinese and Japanese 


owe all ate bright and new. | without their rice? . Freak vegetables | 


are Vory necessary if health is to be 
Maintained; and xdiors who. go. on. 
long journeys | require a certain 


| amount of fresh green food and frait 


otherwise they develop a disesse 
known as “sourvy.”, 

Yor long the origin of this malady 
remained unknown, but, it has since 
béen proved that ft is due to tho mb- 
sence of theses fresh green vegetable 
foods. So, in winter time capecially, 
we ars apt to suffer from a deficiency 


, of these foods, and care should be 
i taken to obtain a certain amount of 


them every day. 
A few Nesetables aré good éaten 


; Taw, but the bulk of them undoubted- 


ly should be cooked, to a greater or 
lesser extent. The cabbage ts an ex- 
ample of the former, It is a very 
healthful article of diet, and contains 
Varlous ‘organic. salts” which are 
highly beneficial. 

When cabbage is conked much of 
this nutriment is lost--boiled out into 
tha water in which the vegetable is 
cooked, and only: the “skeleton,” so 
to say, is left. Cooking seems to de- 
stroy tho ae Neg, properties — the 
vitality--of many foods. If cooked, 
vegetables should be placed in fast 
boiling water — first of ali — as this 
tends to shrivel up the outer coating 
of the vegetahle. and keep the juices 
in the tender-inside portions~instead 
of allowing them to boil out into the 


| water so completely. 


All vegetables contain various valu- 
able organic salts, without which life 
would bo impossible. 

Vegetarians, or those who never eat 
meat, depend for their muscle-form- 
ing elements Jatgely upon the bean, 
pea and lentil family, which form 
“the bealsteak of the wegetarians.” 

‘But one of tic niost valuable pro- 
perties of these foods is the fact that 
they contain a very large quand of 
heat and energy-giving material, The 
meats contain litile of this, and most 
of the other vegetables aro also lack- 
ing in these ‘‘carboliydrates.” 

he cabbage family, comprising the 
cabbage, cauliflower, broceoll, gpinach 
and other grééens, are especially good 
for persons con alge from 
eases of al! kinds; also-for those hav- 
ing anaemia, scrofula, gout and rheu- 
matism. Al] such greens should be 
eaten with caution, and thoroughly 
ehewed or ‘“masticated” before they 
are swallowed. 

Many persons find vegetables bard 
to digest. If so, they should eat them 
sparingly. 

Asparagus is by many considered a 

eat delicacy and is certainly one of 
the choicest of all vegetables. 
eonsidered to be especially good ‘for 
nervous complaints and for diseases 
of the heart, including palp!tation. 
Onions aré noted for the large per- 
centage of valuable salta they contain. 
are fally good for: kidne 

0 


also as good stimulants, 
laxatives. : 


The Word “Scat.” 

It seems to be generally understood 
that there ia no word of its letters 
that can be said quicker than “scat.” 
But just how long it takes to pro- 
nounce it is a 


tion for motlern 
| experimental sacolbey. 


In the center a ! 
£ ‘| .1f you were @ student in the my 
lg i chological laboratory at. a universi 
Sac -| you could determine that, The chrono- 
: S| Scope, an instrament whielt measures 
had eer ed down on the : time in thousandths ig ned yar 
‘ . > ; ¥ mee the time a @ quic 
ae ie Uae: : Yeoplo live as ‘they list and- man eould probably read a 
you.” L-sald proudly, “I error of their teighbors.—London | fhroogh while a: stuttering man se 
: 1 ered seelng anoth love Queen. ae = scat.” ermore, to know how 
‘of this particular | long it takes to Say “‘moat’’ ix not 20 
fit | Jack wats 


very important any how, 


‘ 


Mountain Tobacco. 

In Switzerland a weed called moun- 
tain tobacco is smoked 
tities. Ib is. powdered ‘ore. using 
and causes the smoker to become: 
mental and physical wreck, The na- 
Sree ao eee ake Wi ike. aves 
affecte smo) tied lea 
of the pA hor. plant. The smoker 
trembles with fright at nothing, wee 
bitterly and uses all sorts of wo 
which do not in the least express his 
meaning. The wild dagga, another 
South African plant, poisons slowly 
any one using it. 


The Lawyer's Fee. 
“Yes,” said the first- burglar dis- 
ustediy, ‘I cracked a lawyer's house 
fie other night, and the lawyer was 
there with a gun all ready for me. 
Ke advised me ter git out,” 
"“Ycu got. off easy,” replied the 
other, 
“Not much 1 didn’t! 
me $25 fur the advice. 


The Facetious Operator. 

“T say, mister,” said the cadayerous 
map, en the telegraph office, 
“sould you trust me for a telegram 1 
want to send my wife? I'll pay you 


o-morrow. 

“Sorry, sir,’’ said the operater, “but 
we are terribly r these days, and 
there isn't a tick in the office that 
isn't working overtime as ib is.” 


Telepathy. 

* “7 guppese,” sald the physician, 

wmili and trying te apes witty 

ling the pulse of @ lady pa- 

tlent—-'1 suppose you consider me an 
old humbug?’ 

“Why,” replied ihe lady, “I bad no 


He charged 


idea re could tain a woman's 
thoughts by merely feeling her 
pulse.”* ‘ 

- Nighthawks. 


Our commen uighthawk thinks no- 
thing of baving @ summer home up in 


« winter resort in 
ine § ng the 7,000 miles. 
poe ae weigher a 4 


in pest quan., 


| 


It is}. 


les-—-including» ry 8 js 
ine sean 8 sf * 


“i 
fa man 
at all he makes 


often covers 115 degrees of latitude. | 


re 
Bedouin Girle. 
birth « Bedouin girl ts 
Front ike Caen We cou, 


roper 
. ot gt © she can many any one else 


dE st 
the | here, in 


PILLOWS AND SLUMBER, 
Hints. That May Help te Weeing 


Sound and Refreshing Steep. 


No other single ¢leinent in the 
equipment for sleeping bas quite so 
much effect upon shumber as 
low, and probably no other element 
is quite £0 sadly neglected: Tmper- 
fect sleepers regulate their diet and 
thoir, exercise so_a4-to coax slumber, 
Some 40 go so far as to have the 
beck stretched “noMh and south so 
that the veer in repose shall lie along 
the track of beneficent electric cur. 
rents sesking the north pole. Others 
insulate their beds against any pos- 
sible loss ot electricity by tucking 
each bedpost into a thick glass in- 
sulator such as we see on telegraph 
poles. 

But how many pay any attention 
to the sive and substance of the pil- 
lows? Very few, if any. Insomniecs 
ow> a debt of gratitude to osteopathy, 
for it is from a prominent doctor of 
osteopathy that the following pillow 
lore has been acquired: 

The inside of the pillow should be 
of medium texture, for too hard or too 
soft a substance will cause enougit 
discomfort to make sleop impossible, 
The thickiors of the ‘low s of the 
utmost importance. Ib should be: ex- 
actly the same as the distance be- 
tween the side of the head and e 
Straight line drawn upward from the 
outside of the shoulder, The narrow- 
shouldered person should have a shal- 
low pillow, the broad shouldered a 
thick one, 

The. ideal pillow is-one that main- 
tains the upper Jinks of the backbone 
on a trae horizontal line.. There must 
be no sagging down or jamming up- 
ward of the Misad. for a bending of 


the neck either down or up means , 


that the links of the backbone, which 
are connected with,each other like a 
string of spools, are’ huddled too close 
on ‘one side aid strétched too far 
nea on the opposite side. When 
the Fpine ‘is thus jammed the nerves 
that control the circulation of blood 
in-the brain become congested, and 
the result is an interference with the 
cireulation that causes pain or irrita- 
tion and makes sleep impossible. 
Keep the spine straight by traving 
a pillow that keeps the neck straight 
and ‘your sleep Will be sound anti re- 
freshing. ‘ 


SO RMA RO ReaD ip 
Wonderful Geneva. 


Geneva, a little cantor tour mile 


square and which did not wish to be 
six miles square; a@ little town com- 
posed of a cluster of water mills, « 
street of. penthousts, two wooden 
bridges, two dozen of stone houses on 
@ little hill and three or four Bing 
dicular lanes up and down the bill; 
four miles of acreage round, int grass, 
with modest gardens and fartn «well- 
ing houses; the people pious, learned 
ae busy, to bgt Ra a be to 
a boy, to a git them, pre s' 
to and fro mostly on ther t ib an 


only where they had business. And - 


this bird’s nest of a ce to be the 
centre of religious and social thought 
and of physital beauty to all 6f living 
Europe!— Jobs eee: 


Some of the world’s greatest singers 
have been discovered accidentally, 
Once upon a time Wachtel, the great- 
est tenor of his day in. Any. WAS 


cracking Lis whip and Dailing fares 
in a musical rondo, Mme. Scalchi, 
the greatest of contraltos, is said to 
have called ber wares in the street 
before i was mgs for the opera 
£ ie. ampanini, q 

was a blacksmith, bu 

ing like an ange) 


tag ory tg bes pte 
desert the forge ive sea! is 


Polltical Problem. 


grammar. : 

“What's the ‘trouble?’ 
, “One a ae dtians nesta rn 
18S opened campa eadquarters. 
What I. want to know is. whether 
‘headquarters’ is a jar ora plur 
al noun, and if it is singular, what ir 
the plural?’ ee ‘ 


: Wifely Solicitude, 
“Doctor, my husband is dreadfully 
troubled with sleeplessness. What is 


good for it? s 
“You might try reading him to 
ye: medam,”’ "= @ i 
“What would be the use of that, 
doctor? I try 4 talk him to sl 
every night, and it doesn't do a b 
of good.” ~ 


Faux Pas, 
“Well, thank heaven,” he said, ap- 
roacting a sad-looking man who eat 
ack in a dari: oo: er, ‘that’s over 
with.” 
“What is?’ 
“T’vye danced with the hostess, Have 
you gona through with it A 
“No, I don’t need to. 1’sh the host.” 
ets te ce 


Hobson's Choice. 

Modest Suitor—I am going to marry 
your sister.Willie, but t know I am 
not good enough for her. 

Candid Little Brother—That’s: whai 
Sis says, bub mms’ been telling her she 
ean’t-do any better, 

High Purpose, 

“She awore she would never pag 
eny but « man of h ye pad 
life. Did the & ue 

“That is as you al it. Slie did 
marry a steeplejack. 


Paradoxical Pr rudence. 


“Yhere.is certainly ote thing strange 


- 


ey taal it to go 


Miss Thy cote the sta‘ion)— 
te i will not step 


ville unless it is flagged? 
Flagg Ene won't 
Pog oo unless she recta; didw, 


f 


eo pil» . 


. 


book} -Vhese political problems: are ier ; 
id) ite,” soil the ee worries about — 


pa 


‘finger joint, while, when Hawaii was 


Some Peoples Give Their Dead to 
Animals to’ Devour, 


PECULIAR FUNERAL CUSTOMS 


= a * 

Among Many Races There Are Differ- 

ent Methode of Burial For Men and 

Wormhen—Rites That Are inspired by 
Fear of the Spirit of the Departed. 
ON 


Strunge indeed are many of the cere- 
monies attending the disposal of the 
dead in different parts of the world, 
and, following the natura! order of 
things, the more primitive the nation 
the more primitive its methods. The 
rudest mode now prevalent is that of 
simply teaving the body exposed, but 
the ways of exposure vary consider- 
ably. Some wandering tribes act on 
the maxim, “Where the tree falls, 
there let {t Ile,” and, lenving the dead 
behind, move their camp to pastures 
new. The Wanyanweal, however, carry 
their dead into the forest to be de 


. voured by beats of prey, while some 


of tbe tribes of Guinea throw the 
corpse into the sea. 

The Kainchadaies keep dogs to con- 
sume their dead, under the ea@ange im- 
pression that those: who are devoured 
by dogs will be the masters of fine 
dogs in the world beyond. The Par- 
sees, although a cultured nation, 
place their dead tm a round tower, 
called a tower of sclence, and the 
vultures who make each fowers their 
habitation finish the work. in Da- 
homey it was been stated that a per- 
son whose body has been struck by 
lightning Is hacked te pieces and de- 
woured by the priests. 

Burial, of course, has many dif- 
ferent forms, the simplest of which 
is perhaps the piling of stones or 
thorns over the body to keep off wild 
beasts. Some tribes bury their chil- 
dren by the roadside, so that their souls 
may enter into the bodies of the pas- 
sersby. Burial ta the earth is an ear 
Hier custom than that of cremation, 
embalming, or d the body by sus- 


, pending it from-’a tree, and many 


nations have more than one custom— 
for instance, Oierely burying their 
women, while the men are embalmed 
or dried. 

An tustance of several customs be 
ing In common use in one tribe Is to 
be seen among the Kalmucks. They 
either expose, bury, burn, throw the 
body into the water, pile over it a heap 
of stones or build a bat over it, doing 
whatever the priest considers to be 


the most suitable. The position of the. 


body also varies considerably,’ but as 
® general rule the bead ts lald either 
to the east or te the west The Bon- 
gos, bowever, are an exception, for 
they bury the women with the face 
to the south, and the men with the 
face to the sorth. a 

“Among the primitive nations the 
expressions of grief at the loss of the 
deceased, grief vot untinged with féar 
of bim tn bis oew state, and vent in 
self inficted tortures and other tre- 
mendously exaggerated expressions of 
twoe. The inhabitants of New Zealand 
+-the aborigines that Is—bedaub them- 
selves with pigment and wound them 
selves with-broken shells The Ha- 
‘Walians go still further, knocking out 
their teeth and cutting off an eur or 


under the tude of monarchs, at the 
King’s death tbe nation at large feign- 
eu madness through grief, and this 
was the signal for unbridied license of 
every description. 

No nation is there, as a whole, which 
believes that the soul does not con- 
tinue to exist after it leaves the body, 
and the origin of wany funeral rites 
le the belief that death means the 
soul's transitiod from one state to an- 
other and that it is necessary to enter 
talp the soul op the journey; bence tt 


. $e that wives, servants, horses, money, 


‘weapons, musical, instruments, meat 
aod driok are among the things buried 
witb the body. The Laplanders sup- 
ply the corpse with filot, steel aud tin- 
Ger wherewith to obtain light by the 
way, and the Gouds even place tooth- 
picks in the grave. 

Rather a touching custom its preva- 
lent among the Greenlanders, for on 
the death of a child they bury a dog 
mith it to guide tt, certain that a dog 
will Gnd bis way anywhere. The Rus- 
sians bave a custom of placing a paper 
Passport ion the band of the deceased 
to be shown to Peter at the gate of 
heaven, while at ove time tn Wales 
“sip eaters” were employed, who by 
eating a loaf of bread over the dead 
body took upon themselves the burden 
of the deceased's sina. 

it would seem thet the fear of being 
baupted by the ghost of the departed 
bas bad oo swall effect upon many of 
the rites practiced for the Egyptians 
turn the body round and round so as 
to confuse the spirit’s idea of direc 
tion, while the peasants of Branden- 
burg pour a pall of water after the 
corpse to prevent Its return, and the 
aborigines of Austrailia “remove the 
palis of the dead, so that they may 
wot scratch their way out of the grave. 
London Giube. ; 


Showing the Wiedom of Knowing 
Your Own Name. . 

A Frenchman with a pame spelled a 
ia Paria and pronounced something 
like Ca-choo had néver learned to read 
jor write, but be managed to disgnise 
jthe fact pretty well until he moved to 
}a new community where the name was 
|not comimdén, Going to the postoffice 


Lone-amorebig, tre tuned: * 


“Got Aty wail for Joe Ca-choo?” 
“What's the name?’ inquired the 
clerk, 
“Qachoo—Joe Cachoo.” | deg 
“How do you spell it?" . g 
_ “Can't you spell Joe Ca-choo?” 
“No,” said the clerk, “I never heard 
|it before.” 
Then the disgust of the Frenchman, 
| which bad been constantly rising, boil- 
ed over, and be snorted: 
} “Well, if you can’t spell why don’t 
you sell your old postofiice to some one 
who can?”’—Kansas City Star. 


Accelerating Brain Activity, 

In the early days of Wisconsin two 
of the most prominent lawyers of the 
| state were George B. Smith and IL. 8, 
Sloan, the latter of whom had a habit 
of injecting Into bis remarks to the 
court the expression, “Your honor, | 
have an idea.” A certain case bad 
been dragging along through a hot 
summer day when Sloan sprang to his 
feet with his old remark, “Your hon- 
or, | have ao idea.” 

Smith Immediately bounded ap, as- 
sumed an impressive attitude and in 
great solemnity said: 

“May It please the court, I move that 
a writ of habeas corpus be issted by 
this court immediately to take the 
learned gehtleman’s idea out of soll- 
tary confinement.”—Popular Magazine, 


Social Excuses. 

Miss Inez Milholiand; at a luncheon 
in Newport, lamented the loss of the 
suffrage in the recent Ohio election. 

“Why did we lose?” she wailed. 
“Our opponents’ arguments are always 
so silly! They're as silly and false as 
the average social excuse.” 

She smiled and added: 

“Apropos of the average social ex- 
cuse, a Newport man was invited to a 
house party in Maine and wired: 

"Regret can't come. Lie follows by 
post.’""—New York Tribune. 


Complete infermation. 

“Where's your father?" asked the 
man in fancy outing clothes, — 

“Lemme see if 1 can remember,” 
sald the boy with one suspender. “If 
you're the map to collect the interest 
on the mortgage he's gone to town 
and I don't know whet he'll be back. 
if you’re a Democrat or a Republican 
or a bull moose he’ be home all day 
Sunday, and if you're the man that. 
owes Him for a bushel of potatoes he's 
Might around there in the woodshed.”— 
Washington Star, ~ 


Practical Application. 

A Sunday schoo! teacher, after a 
talk to her small boys on the cruelty 
of cutting dogs’ ears and tails, asked: 

“What does the Bible say about it? 
Who can tell me?” 

“Il can,” said a small boy holding 
up bis hand, 

“Well, what is it, John?’ 

“What God bath joined together let 
no man put asunder.”—Judge. 


Labor Saving Suggestion. 

Mrs. Bacon—! see that to an Illinois 
woman has been granted a patent on a 
screw hook made of a single piece of 
wire so shaped that ft serves as a 
shade roller bracket and curtain pole 
holder at the same time. 

Mr. Bacon—Too bad the lady didn’t 
go a step furtber and make it to: but- 
ton a woman's dress up the back!— 
Yonkers Statesman, A 5 


"Jt Had Been Read. 
First Jeweler—| bave bad proved to 
me that advertising brings results. 
d Jeweler—How? Ls 
First Jeweler—Yesterday evening I 
advertised for a watchman, and dur- 
ing the night my shop was 
by burglars.—Penny Pictorial. — 
tt 


‘ Pedestrianiom, 


“How. is this}. Twenty. centa for 
eheese? But it walked by Itself!” 
“Ezactly, madam; we figure in the 
cost of training it!"~Le Sourire. 


The Trouble, 

“By Jove! 1 left my purse under my 
pillow!" — . 

“Oh, well, your servant ta bonest, 
isn't she?” ; 

“That's just it, She'll take tt to my 
wife.”—Boston Poat. ¢ 


\ 
\ 
- y ‘ ‘ $ _ 


‘ \ 


@HR REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA, ne 


WINNING A HIGH JUMP, 
MH alae wd eA : 
‘Paychological Aspecte of One of Our, 

( -Mictoties at Stodkholm - 

Anverica’s victory in the high jump 
At Stockholm was especially interesting 
bécause of its paychology. As James 1. 
Sullivan teils the-story nm Outing, the | 
stars of the American team one by one 
dropped out until, when the bar was 
moved to a height -of. six feet. four 
inébes, only Hivhatd¥, & Pouth from’ 
Utah, and Licsche of Germany were 
left. The German bad cleared the bar 
oo his first effort every time and looked 
to be the winver, , 

At this stage Richards had the first 
jump. Everybody. thought he would 
take a great deal of time and care, as 
be bad been compelled to make two or 
three tries before succeeding at every 
preceding height. To everybody's sur- 
jprise “he disdained. all preparation, 
skipped upto the bar with an easy 
ron and hopped over it with a full two 
inches to spare.” 

instantly Licsche became intensely 
excited. He made his preparations 
hervously, went up to the bar and 
missed. A second time be tried and 
missed again. Richards, bowever, in 
common with everybody else, expected * 
him to get over on his third aftempt 
and was running about to*keep legs 
supple. 3 : wae 

Jast as the German was ready for his 
final effort a pistol was fired for the 
start of a race, This so disconcerted 
him that be waited until the race was 
over. Then be got ready again, This 
time the band began to play, and once |. 
more he refused to jump. After nine 
minutes of this series of delays one of 
the Swedish officials stepped up and 
asked him to burry. This was. the last 
straw. 1h atiother minute Licsche ran 
at the bar and made a botch of his only 
vewalning try. ‘ 


AVIATOR’S SICKNESS. 


Sensations That Come With Flights 
. Inte High Altitudes, 
Mountain climbers are subject to 


Variety of Employment May Be Found 
For Handy Window Jack, 

A window jack for repairing, clean 
(ng and painting the windows and the 
openings in the barn should tind « 
place op évery farm, The accompany: 


Serve Zgge at the Matutinal Meal, 


G00D FOR BARN USE, 


spoonfuls of water as there are eggs, 
counting ‘two yolke..as a whole egg, 
ing Mlustration will show the readet 
now such a jack may be easily con 
SUENCRO DN i Asai ai on et ay 

“The upper drawing hows the jack 
completed and will be. understood 
without further elaboration. The low: 
er drawing shows the jack In place in 


fork until @ spdonful can. be taken 1p, 
‘then strain into a: bowl, 
mild favér Of garlic rub the inside of 
the bow! into which the eggs are to be 
broken with a elove of gartic, Have 
ready im the cleanest, smovthest and 


ful of melted butter. Into this pour 
the egg mixture, set on a hot part yf 
the range for a minute, then with © 
thin knife 
from. the 


rate the cooked portion 
of the frying pan and 


«ant 


(From Farm and Raach.} 


Wy \ 
Ys 
WINDOW 3A0K. 
a window. The pin is made of any 
strong wood, such as oak or hickory, 
or it may be ad iron pin. 

As will be seen, several holes are 
bored In the inside end of the jack and 
at various angles, @o the jack will fit 
any thickness of walls. The top board 
should be at least fourteen or sixteen 
inches wide, and the jack should be 
well natled and braced, as illustrated... 
—Farm and Ranch. a 


DEVION FOR KEBPING A008 WARM. 
gently rock the pan back and forth, 
thé side next the bandle raised as the 
pan Is pushed forward and the oppo- 
site ralsed as It is brought back, that 
the ancooked part may yin down next 


SELECT SEED CORN EARLY. 


the pan. When creamy throughout be- 
gin at the side of the pan next the 
| handle and roll the omelet, letting the 
pan rest on the stove a moment until 
the omelet ts slightly browned, then 
add a little butter If needed and tura 
on a hot platter. - ; 
For keeping botled eggs warm for 
the tardy breakfast arrival nothing is 
nicer than the neat device illustrated, 


Many Advantages [In This Plan. 
Keep Close to Type. 

One of the main reasons why seed 

corn should be selected early is to be 

reasonably sure it will grow the fol- 


and the muscular work done.by climb- 
ers. Then there is the balloon disease, 
with analogous symptoms, but: which 
does not appear except at very high 
altitudes. — ae ‘ 
- Newer than elther, of these is aero- 
. |plane or aviator’s sickness. Its effects 
tre due to the rapidity with which the 
maximum height is reached and the 
still greater speed at the descent, in- 
volving the passing from a low air 
pressure to @ one. Aeroplanes 
sometimes reach, altitudes ‘gf 10,000 
feet In an hour, and here the effects 
on the ear, such as humming or erack- 
ing noise, are about the same as In a 
balloon, but the effect on the respitra- 
tory organs is different. The’ pilot is 
her out of breath and he feels a 
Special Kind of uneasiness: ~~~ ~~ 
During the descent the heart beats 
are of greater amplitude, but without 
accelerating. A quick descent in a 
salling fight at a speed of 1,000 or 
1,200 feet a minute or even. more— 
since Morane descended at Havre from 
8,000 feet In six minutes—causes a feel- 
lug of a special kind or uneasiness, ac- 
companied with humming in the ears. 
Burning tn the face ts also felt and- 
& severe headache; also great tendency 
to sleep. The movements of the body 
are sluggish and unskillful. These 
rate, have a sample ear that you can | Ymptoms continue for some time after 
look at occasionally to belp you in|the landing, and tne tension tn the 
following one. Keep this type ear arteries is noticed to be bigher thap 
handy when selecting corn-in the fall, | the formai.—Chicago News, 
and in the spring, when the final se j 
lection ig made, it is well to compare 
all ears carefully with the type ear, 


with a glase cover. , 


THE TIN WEDDING. 


A Jolly Way to Celebrate Thia Anni. 
The tin wedding bas possibilities, 
and the couple who have been married 
ten yeats and want to celebrate the 
anniversary can find numerous ways 
in which to make merry. — sult, 
The affair may be a dinner or an tn- 
formal supper, followed by bridge or 
dance, with @ supper later. The tnvita- 
tions. should be issued on white cards 
or paper edged with a silver or tin ef- 
fect. Ask the guests to appear if pos- 
sible ip their bridal attire, or at least 
some part of it, and also remind them 
in a postscript ‘not to forget the wed- 
ding gift. When the guests assemble 
have them leave their presents in a 
Jarge new tin dishpan with ribbons on 
the handles or on a big tin tray placed 
on the table inthe ball, : 

‘The supper menu may include a boutl- 
lon, jellied meats, coffee and iced des- 
serts with.cake and bonbons. As for 
the table appointments, if one does not 
mre to use tin dishes sliver"can be 
utilized and the tin idea carried out by 
having a centerpiece of chrysantbe 
mums ina spreading tin bucket. By 
having handles put on a bright new 
milk can a loving cup could be sup- 
plied. Yellow or pink is pretty with 
the tinware, 

Vor place cards a tinsmith can cut 
five inch squares of tin. with’ two holes 
at the top for a broad ribbon to go 
through, by which they can be tied to 
thée backs of chairs; The names can 


& 
3 
5 


no more to raise a yield 
a perfect stand than it 
feild with a 60 to 70 per cent stand. 


This plant is tender and easily mJured, 
nditions. 


unless kept under favorable co: 

Seed corn that is not thoroughly dry 
before. cold weather. will freeze. The 
freezing of the kerne). causes it : 


pand, thus injoring the germ, or little 
plant, lowering its vitality and often 
destroying it, so the kernel will not ger. 
‘minate, It is well, if possible, to have 
every enr of seed corn selected before 
a killing frost. Re 
in the choice of-corn for seed one 
selects the eurs that he believes will 
give him the largest yield of good 
corn the following year. It is a good 
to choose an -ear of corn that 
as near the type wanted as possible; 
then keep this ear from year to year, 
or until you get a better one. At any 


The Highest Railway. 

| fror thirty-nlve years the highest rail- 
way In the world was the Oroya line in 

Peru, which at one place reaches an al- 
titude of 4,834 meters above sea level. 

Passengers who wish to avoid the risk 
of wountain sickness in its most ag- 
gravated form bave to make two or 
three stops of a day or two on the way 
up. Since July line bas taken sec- 
oud place, as the few Bolivian railway 
which connects Potosi with Rio Mulatt 
reaches an altitude of 4,880 meters. It 
is’ not considered likely that -this rec~ 
ord will ever be surpassed unless Tibet 
ls opened to civilization. 


PAIAAAAAAIAPAAAAAAAAIAIAA 
TOO BADI 


Let us devote a few minutes of 
pity to the poor farmer's wife 
far away from ,the bargain 
counter. Her children cannot 
-watch the Gre engines pass by. 
The only place they have to play 


there is “a large assortment to choose 
from, The attractive snappers dre a 
wise selection, The allver paper va- 
riety should be selected, The musical 
toys wrapped up in tin foll would also 
do as favors, 

At the conclusion of the evening ‘et 
the best man, if he happens to be one 
of the number, present the gifts, read- 
ing aloud the sentiments attached to 
each, 


He Walted Until Tomorrow. 
Kansas City furnished the other day 
one of “life’s little ironies” that might 
bave inverested even Mr, Hardy, the 
aovelist. A business man made & 
memorandum saying that he was to 


Iilinota to- report for work as bis 
stenograpber, He allowed the matter 
peg he ge In the 


Le + 

' Ourtains For the Maids’ Room,. 
For maids’ rooms and ourseries and 
the rooms of the house where lace cur- 
tains are vot wanted serim js in much 
Gemand and js charming, Plain ecru 
‘serim is 15 cents a yard, or with a 
Inwoven pattern-may be had for 
same price, With a double plaid 
_— inwoven it costs 18 cents a 

a 


Orchard and Garden. 
fier the sucawnores nek: ban Seeg 


set and cared for through the sum: | send of during the usual vacation 868 | Witte or the ecru it ta 85 and 45 centa 
mer, it sho son the Imperial Bank of Germany ts | | yar and is pufticieutly dainty for 
winter, A any bedroom. It iw especially in tune 
with pe modern notions of furnish- 
too early, tng a bungalow, The easiest-thing for 
Make a the very busy housewife to do ip her 
all ' home is te furvish with such inexpen- 
ing them | sive draperies and coverings that they 
The least are renewed for almost as little as 
will be rot cleaning costs, 1p this way much wor |. 
at : 3 ty te auved her, aid me alwaye 
AS ped dene : eu byw arti: 
sy ge Kighecd’ eevee aad aban: tik 
s woven iow square 
rg Pip | cok# jike @ easement window haa 
to ft nooks i the frame to serve as 4 bat 
for sore neta pat ee i canes ot 
vompost pile any armehglr are much mare com: 
fo fortable than the foothold 
winter te improve vt the ald fashioned tele 


. 
} 


Frendh Omelet a Dellcious Way: to 


To make'a French omelet break the 
éges into a bowl, add as many table 


Med Fur Craze. 


and for each three eggs a.dash of pep-- 
per and one-quarter ofa teaspoonful of 
‘salt, Beat the egae with a spoon or 


if obe Iikes a, 


thinnest of frying pana.a tablespoon- . 


which is a highly polished olckel dish 


be painted on in colors, For favori® 


: Live tn your guvest roo 


pan aereere ‘ * 


Smoked Pear! Monkey Is the N 


COMBINATIONS QF: PELTS._ 


Unusual Effects Derived From Blook« 
ed Designe—Close Haired Furs te 
Have Supremacy Over Long Haired 
Onee—Moleskin Will Be Very Popu+ 
lar Thies Winter, - © . 


The fashion for furs this season is so 
great that there is practically no ‘Mmit 
to. the different ways in which for 
may be applied. The Parisian woman 
has gone so far as to put fur on her 
night robe, Nevér ‘before ‘have such 
unique effects been obtained’ through 
the combination of furs, and probably 
never before bave so many different 
kinds of furs been put together in se 
many different ways. Ermine and 
pointed fox are used together as well 
as ermine and mole, and also mole ané 
seal. 

One unusual effect is derived through 
the setting together of different kinds 
of furs with their naps running in op- 
posite directions, This makes a block 
éffect Which Is charming. © It is worm 
around thé bottom of skirts or wraps 
for a’ border, and from the furriers’ 
polnt of view ts an economical-ase of 
the material. For the woman whe 


; ATTRACTIVE COAT IN SEALETTR, 
Itkes to be up to date, but. does not care 
to dress extravaguntly, it {s worth 
while to. know that fine bandings of 
white covey may be bought for trim- 
ming at about §1.25 a yard, This may 
be used to adfuutage both as trim- 
ming and for millinery. pa ny 
Close pelt furs are to have the su- 
premacy over the jong balred furs, 
though the latter will also be worn, 
Moleskin will be very popular, Appar- 
ently it gves on everything and any- 
thing. [tls to be found tn trimming or 
made up tn whole mauties, It gives 
itself up to. the hnuds of the designer 
more gatisfactorily thun any otber fur, 
as it Is a tepder skin und drapes easily, 
The fondness fur mole may be aveount- 
ed for in the Parisian ¢ for taupe, 
that color which shades from Cedar 
brown to ollve green aud with which 
moleskin barinonizes beautifully, 
Owltng to the fact that sealskin has 
become sv very dear and is now nearly 
op a par with Russian sable in. price a 
substitute ts offered iu muskrat, 


soared this sedsop that they are out of 
reach save for daughters and Wives of 
multimiliiondires, ‘Ebe fur manufac: 
turers, realizing this -state of affairs; 
put thelr heads together, and the re- 
sult of this conference is that women 
of moderate means may wear the fash- 
fonable large muffs and néckpleces and 
long coats in pear fur, which baffles 


the skill of even an expert to detect 


from the seal thing, One of these 

clever imitations is sealette that bas 

the deep brown color with silvery 

gilots that distinguishes sealskin, A 

et of this pelt ls seep-tn the illustra- 
nf : 


Visit In Guest 


Bo high. bave the prices of all furs . 


estedin. Edith Pord than in some one 
else's money which ‘had fallen into my 
possession and which instead of being 
a blessing was-a burden, Harker ad- 
vanced. me fapldly, 

Hdith remained true to me, and her 
father, hating been agreeably disap- 
pointed In me, consented to our mar 
tiage, All wis ready. for the nuptials 
when oné day a shabby min with a 
“‘wangdog Wok about came inte 
the office and asked to see me. 

“This is Mr, George Winchell?” he 
asked, 

‘That's my. name.” « 

He took a dirty paper from his pock- 

et, to which he referred, and said; 
+ “On the 12th of November, 19—, John 
Fiynn, driving cab No, 58, took up a 
fare at the door of the University clab 
and drove the gentleman to 246 Sum- 
mit avenue”’— 

“Never mind the rest of that,” I 
sald, “Tell if you are looking for. any- 
thing that was lost.” 

The man appeared lil at ease, “Please 
don't speak so loud, sir, If you are the 
man who was driven that day in that 
cab trom the University club to”— 

“1 was. Go on.” 

“You may have found 9 package of 
bills.” * : 

“1 did" : ‘ 

At this potat the man hesitated, and, 
seeing that he was not getting op with 
his revelation, I took him to a private 
room atid said: ‘ ‘ 

“Now, out with it.” e 
‘ After much trouble I learned that he 
amie money I had found a 
a e| to carry somewhere ‘ 
had pcre! rd ba purpose. Not 
daring to take the bills out of the cab 
when be alighted, fearing an arrest, 
he left it-ander the seat, taking ndte of | | 
the cab’s number, He was arrested | 
for having stolen an overcoat and was 
sent to prison for a year, He had re- 
cently been discharged, some time hav- 
ing been taken off his stay for good be- | — 
havior, and had communicated with |- 
the man from whom he bad got the 
bilis, and the two bed set about trac- 
ing them. The person who had employ- 
ed him to carry the money was a cash- 
ler of some institution, from which he 
had purloined it. : 

1 bad had enough of the matter and 
agreed to a plan by which the amount 
could be returned to its, rightful own- 
ers, they paying the rasces a small 
sum and guaranteeing their immunity 
from prosecution. All the details had 
been arranged when.{t occurred to me 
‘that I had rented the box.in which I 
had deposited it in a fictitious name, 

What name? I could’ no more re 
member than I could repeat the book 
of Job. 


: and 
| Garden 


2 Te 


“SEED BED FOR ALFALFA. 


Gmall Seed and Delloate Nature of 
Plant Require Compact Soil, _ 

When alfalfa is grown on corn oF 
potato ground the preparation of the 
seed bed is a comparatively simple af- 
fair, writes L. R. Waldron of the 
North Dakota experiment station, 
The land shonld be disked im the 
spring and worked with a peg tooth 
harrow. AYter disking and harrowing, 
the ground should be worked occa- 
sionally duting the spring with disk 
and barrow, in order to conserve the 
moisture and to kill the young gem 
minating weeds. 

Growing alfalfa after a corn or po- 
tato crop is of added advantage in 


A BIG FIND 


But It Proved to Be 
a Burden 


_ By REGINALD D. HERON 


My interview with Bdith's father 
was a stormy one. He gave me to 
onderstand that 1 could bare no 
daughter of his; that if 1 persuaded 
Bdith to marry me without bis con- 
gent be would never recagnize elther 

7 of us ang more than if we were stran- 

gere to him, and that the results of 
were our foliy and Edith’s ingratitude must 
be endured .without any assistance 
whatever from. him, 

“What kind of a young man are 
you,” he thundered, “for a gentleman 
to give his daughter to? As poor as a 
eburch mouse, you bave come here in 
@ hired carriage to see me.” 

“Yes,” | retorted, “and [ll go away 
4n the carriage in which I came,” 

“And | hope you'll stay away.” 

We turned our backs upon each oth- 
er, he to go into another room, 1 to 
#0 out and get into the cab. 1 saw 
Edith at an upper window with a 
pained expression on ber face, Shé 
kisged her hand to me, and-t. waved 
amine to her. Then | got into the-cab, 
shut the door with a bang and was 
driven away. § 

As it happened T sat down ob the 
feft side’ of the carriage, whereas | 
had come on the right side, The seat 
was uneven, but 1 was too hot from 
my recent Interview to notice it for 
some time. Presently without getting 
my mind off the latter 1 endoavored to 
arrange the former. .The hump re 
mained, 1 arose and lifted the cush. | 
don, There lay a package about seven 
inches long by three wide, the wrapper 
being brown paper. | was not so ab- 
sorbed in having been refused the 
irl l.joved but that I removed it and 
revealed a package of bank bills, The 
one on top_was of the denom!nation of 
—- $100. The next was $1,000, the next 

$500, and so on of mixed denomina- 
tions to the end. 1 counted $50,000 in 
walt. at ; ; 
iy Here was a fnd—a big Ond—a deuced 
big find, It. would be impossible to 
wive the ‘coufusion of thoughts pass 
_ ang throngb my mind. 1 had stumbled 


station. 
SEEDING ALFALFA WITH HAND DRILL 


that the seed bed is frm below the 
‘top, two or three inches. The small 
weed of the alfalfa and the delicate) 
nature of the young plant demand a 
compact seed bed in comparison to 
what is allowable forg corn or even 
tor wheat. ‘ 

To an open, porous seed bed the soll 
is apt to dry out im the upper few 


Photograph by Long Island agricultural 
rs experiment 


nie ol the Dic tsi rSened i —. As soon as I could get away from | inches, and if this occurs eres 
would ye mine, Wou duties | took.a train Tor my for- | after the germination of the alfa 
nae of the bills turo up? What ped : 


mer home and on arrival Crove to the 
safe deposit company and asked for 
the custodian. A young man stepped 
forward, and I asked for the old gen- 
tleman who had rented me a box about 
+p year before, He had died five months 
ago.and the young man had been put 
tn his place. ; 

My story as to the renting of the 
box was told—that I bad not given 
my own name and had forgotten the 
assumed one.~ 1! was informed. that | 
would find the number of Pong box on 
my key, but I replied that, having | 
been fearful of losing the key, 


young seedlings are quite Hable te 
die through lack of moisture. 

If alfalfa is te be grown after a crop 
of small grain the land should be fall 
plowed. The fall plowing allows the 


-would be the outcome? These were a. 
few of the flashes upon my brain, but 
wive only a faint picture of the tur 
wmofl there. 1 can only eay tn justice 
‘to myself that’ almost ‘nstantly all 
wave way to the fact that the’ money 
‘was vot mine and its owner must be 


) During the next few days I bought 
‘every newspaper issued in the city 
where I lived and had found the bills. 
wot doubting that their loss would be 


after 1 een osing the key, | bad 
tice of put it in a very safe place, but where | 
‘had also forgotten. 


chum, Heory Harker: 


ome at once. The position te vacant'| 
- and cannot remain so forty-eight hours. 


This was in response to.a letter } 
+ 


ee 


‘SAVING THE STRAWBERRIES. 


"Marsh Hay Ie Good For Use as « 
Muloh—Way to Keep Celery. 
As soon as the ground freezes mulch 


had written a few days before to Har 
ker, who had succeeded bis father ax 
president of a large manufacturing es 
tablishment, asking him to give me a 


Fo stb lee Groth, eth ay on on my}. @ brother to me than an employ- 
toh and began at my | er, dnd told bim of the ix ! was th. 
barried preparation to leave. But} While he was ready to do anything for 
‘what sboujd Ido with the bills 1 bad| me in bis power, there seemed to be 
found? aatina “an sei amioaald “the nothing definite for him to do. He : 
said the soonest mended,” 1 had} could not belp showing a slight suspi- nearly all winter. “At harvest 
&ept the matter to myself and the| cion; This revealed to me that my |dug the plants, leaving considerable 
ey under lock and key, 1 belug the | story was not very credible. 1 was 1D | gol] on the roots, removed them to 
ly one who knew where, 1 must. Meanwhile ‘parties con- Fe dimly lighted of the cellar 
act at once. 1 thought of depositing of k Y 
the biils iu a bank. No; that wouldn't bs 


do at all, Fifty thousand dollars of a 
e@tranger’s money in one's possession 


- 


hly watered, taking to wet 
dnvoived danger. It might land the la: ah pce A 
Gnder in jail. To give it to a friend plant, Bvery three weeks during the 
for safe keeping would require deposit- | winter it was thoroughly watered. It 
1 ig Reads ei By aches oe me kept perfectly and continued to grow 
me. : was vi winter. — 
ot ae Serre es | Sea renee cate [end "occ roman 
8 joa op Me conqu 
pS debe ce dagger: Pe rer and his Indisposition to pen ie 
mpany and rented a box. It was the | me $50,000 that be mig’ 
thing 1 did before taking a train, | back, He drew a check for the money 
ae wee-fe 8. Grendel: Ramer, : MF.4 uarnblo OF Ie 08 
was to use an assumed name, but who w 
Er ihe neste, at deapmmeded Thad wot Boks Foals eat Gairymen in Australia have adopted the 
ae wettied upon a name. When the Introduced between practice of blanketing cows during wet 
bis 


EEGs 


¢ 
i 
& 
2 
i. 
s 
Fs 
Ee 


5? 


} | Kreater 


EE 


WINTER POULTRY CARE,” 


—_— 
Precautions Needed to Bring the Bid. 
dies Through in Good Shape. 


. tn the frst place the general poultry 


house, where al! but the latest brooda 
will nécedsdrily be much confined dur 


‘| ing storma and severe. cold, should 


have a thorough going over, 

If--the floor boards have warped, 
leaving wide cracks, especially in the 
places where the feeding is done, these 
should be filled in to secure greater 
warmth and especially to prevent the 


grain from falling through and attract 
ing rats. Window glass that has been, 


broken should be reset,: not replaced 
with a board or shingle, since the 
fowls will need all the sunshine from 
every Sirection that can reach them! 
Then if it is possible give the walls, 
and ceiling a thick coat of whitewash, 
which will seal op all mites and other 
vermin &arboring in crevices, neu- 


‘tralizing d\sease germs of every kind 


and help,to keep the alr sweet and 
wholesome, and will besides add very 
much to the light and cheerfulness of 
the Inclosure, 

The perches should be Improved by 
scraping, smoothing and treating with 
coal oll, especially at the ends that 
rest in the socketa. The nest boxes, 
too, should have all the old litter taken 
out and be thoroughly brushed before 
belng refilled with short straw ‘or 
dried lawn clippings, at the bottom ef 
which ia such a box it Is a good plan 
to place a handful of tobacco stems or 
layers of red cedar twigs, which wil) 
assist in keeping the hena clear of lice. 

A elzable dusting box must be pro- 
vided with a liberal supply of road 


dust, which should have been collected’ 


in the dry weather of summer or early 
fall. Lacking this, sifted coal ashes 
from furnace or grate may be used, 
but never wood ashes, which would 


‘| have the effect of bleaching the legs 


and loosening the feathers. 

Another necessary provision ia a box 
of crushed oyster shelle and other 
sharp grit, with the addition of a por 
tion of pounded charcoal.—Farm Prog- 
reas. 


SALT FOR THE CRITTERS, 


Geod Way te Supply it Ie Leese in a 
Homemade Bex. 

The best way of salting cn‘, 

have it always available so | 


the animals can lick it, or another good 


slices. 

bage leaves. Expose the baits at 
ight end im the morning gather up 
and destroy the snails clinging te them. 
Lime scattered about the cellar will 
repel the snails, also salt. Bits of 
gum camphor scattered about are of- 
fensive to them,—Rural New Yorker. 


fi 
ze 
l 
il 


fs to 

they’ 
may go to it at pleasure. This can be 
accomplished by having a brick of 
salt tacked up under the shed where 


THINGS THAT YOU 
WILL WANT. TO. KNOW. 


we 


Soap Jelly.—Shred down any ode 
{and ends of soap with a knife special 
ly kept for this, put the sonp into a 
pan with sufficient hot or cold water 
to cower it and melt jt all over the 
fife til) clear and quite emooth, or, If 
preferred, the shredded soap may be 
placed in a jar in the oven and melted. 
Tye pan must not be filled too full, as 
the soap bolis up very quickly. The 
pan and knife must be kept spectaily 
for this. 

To Wash Chamols Leather.—Wash 
and rinse just like flannel in warm but 
not hot water, never rubbing it with 
soap, but using soapsuds or soap jelly. 
Then rinse in claan warm water till 
all the soap is removed and press -it 
Well between the hands to get rid of 
as much moisture as possible, but do 
not wring it. Then shake it out well, 
pull it out into a good shape and hang 
it up tn a good wind and not too hot 
sun to dry or in a warm room where 
it will dry quickly, but never put it 
nearafire. . 

To Precipitate Whiting.—Tie up a 
sufficient quantity of whiting loosely 
in a piece Of fine muslin; fasten this to 
the handie of'a jug, letting the bag 
hang over inside, Four over it enough 
cold water to cover the whiting and 
let it stand all day, by which time 
all the whiting should have passed 
through. Pour off the water and put 
the sediment on to plates on the rack 
over the hot stove or in some warm 
corner till perfectly dry and then sture 
in tins. When wanted moisten with 
eufficient methylated spirit to bring it 
to the consistency of cream. When ap. 
plying it wasb and dry the sliver and 
apply the paste somewhat thickly with 
a soft rag. Allow it to dry on in a 
warm place, then rub well with a clean 
cloth, brush with a perfectly clean 
plate brush to remove any of the pow. 
der from the crevices, then rub up 
Onally with a clean leather. 

Sliver Boap.—Put into a pap four 
ounces each of washing soda, yellow 
soap and whiting with one pint of cold 
water, Boil these all together till the 
soap, etc., are entirely dissolved, keep- 
tng it well stirred; then pour it into a 
jar and leave to set; then turn it out 
and cut into cakea. This may be used 
for the daily washing of the silver if 
liked. 


Accepting Obligations. 

Many a life is spoiled by false pride 
A “sponge” is not admirable, but fag 
more womep err on the other side an@ 
canndt accept a favor graciously. 

A woman of wealth and infuencd 
was taken to task for her kindnesses 
to a daughter of a schoo} friend, while 
apparently neglecting the daughter of 
her sister, a girl of the same age. Shé 
replied: 

“My niece ts too independent. She 
makes me fee! patronizing sometim 
again acts as if the kindness I off 
was insignificant and she does me @ 
favor by accepting it. Nancy is big 
natured enough to accept obligations 
graciously abd always shows her ap 
preciation.” : 

That is the secret of many a girl's 
good times—taking a favor graciously 
and being grateful for it. 

There are some persons from whom 
we could take nothing. To do so meang 
too great loss of self respect. Usually 
such donors are but near friends. The 
true friend, if she is in the least tact 
ful, will not make her kindnesses « 
burden, and the right kind of a girl 
will accept them in the kindly spirit is 
which they are offered. 

The girl whom it ts a real Joy to be 
friend does not expostulate or gush, 
She jooks and acts ber appreciation 
rather than speaks it. Her thanks 
are heartfelt, but simple. She does not 
protest, “Oh, I can never take that 
from you,” meaning to all the timg, nor 
does she ever bint that the kindness 
might put her under obligations that 
abe would feel irksome. This attitude 


nner inn ennaanas 


giver. 

The girl you like to befriend never 
makes the fatal blunder .of indiffer- 
ence. She is too clever not to realize 
that no benefactor enjoys the feeling 
that ber thoughtfulness doesn’t “cut 
much ice.” 4 

But the truly clever girl, she who. is 
apparently showered with. attentions, 
always shows ber gratitude, though 
she may talk comparatively little’ of 
it. She realizes that nothing she may 
do can repay the favors received, but 


THE REST GOWN. 


Geeod Leoking Costumes That Are Are 
tistio and Inexpensive, 

For a rest gown in which one can 
feally rest there is no fabric more 
gultable than ecachemire de sole since 
{t is practically unrivaled for its soft- 
nése of texture and ligbtvess of weight. 
Long, graceful lines are of great value, 
too, in emphasizing the picturesque 
‘} aspect of a robe of this kind, 

An admirable gown of this descrip 
tion is made in Baxe blue cachemire 
de sole, beld in at the waist with e belt 
of satin ribbon of the same shade and 
opening down the center of the front 
to show a@ natrow satin panel chqgon 
in a harmonizing shade of Kgyptian 
red. The small buttons are of red 
enamel, while the Robesplerre collar 
is of Persian embroidery worked ia 
soft shades of red and blue. 

The bodice ts very prettily tucked, 
and the Jong, tight Sitting sleeves are 
trimmed along the outer arm with red 
enamel *buttons and finished with 
dainty ruffies of alencon lace, which 
not only outiloe the wrist, but are aiso 
continued along the sleeve in the pret- 
ty fashion which obtaing at the mo- 
ment — 

In ivory white silk cashmere, with a 
vieux rose satin center pane: and but 
tons to matcb—this would make a de- 
lightful gown. The same idea might 
also be carried out very successfully 
with the narrow panel in amethyst 
eatin and the gown itself ip a very 
pale shade of mauve adurned with gli- 
ver buttous, ‘ 


perbaps very simply, she becomes the 
bestower of kindnesses. It may be 
only by taking upon herself the duty 
her benefactor finds irksome, or she 
may make her unexpected little gifts, 
inexpensive trifies, things she has 
worked herself, but trifes that stand 
for appreciation and gratitude. 

And be sure this appreciation will be 
appreciated. No one does a kindness 
hoping for returns, but no one likes 


ly. The girl who grabs at all that 
comes her way, taking it as a righ® 
rather than a favor, soon has nothing 
to grab at. The most generous spiri§ 
resents belong worked. : 


A Church Wedding. 

If a br&> elect has selected a church 
for the setting of the ceremony she 
should Insist on punctuality. She and 
her attendants should arrive exactly 
op the hour mentioned tn ber invita- 
ons or a few minutes before. ~ — 

The mother and any elisters and 
brothers of the bride arrive a little 
before the bride, and the mother, om 
the arm of the head usher, walks to 
her seat, the first pew on the left at 
the head of the center aisle, 

On the arrival ‘of the bride, ber fa- 
ther and attendants the center aisle 
is cleared by the ushers, and news is 
sent to the groom and the organist. 


When Yeu Clean Heuse, 
A novelty which every housewife 
will appreciate is this brush rack with 


tron of honor immediately precedes 
the bride, who ts leaning on the arm 
of her father or her nearest male rela- 


rs divide into two groups 
the side of the chancel. 
maids do the same. 

The bride is met by the groom at the 
head of the alsie and removes ber 
band from hen father’s arm, taking 


i= 
ze 
se 


ber father standing behind ber until 
the moment of giving ber away. After 
be has done this he steps to the pew 
on the left beside his wife. : 

The bride hands her bouquet to ber 
maid of honor as the moment for giv- 
ing away arrives. 

After the ceremony the bride turas 
and places ber left band op the arm 
of ber husband. The pair move down 
the aisle, followed by the maid of hon- 
or and. the best map and then the 


The parents of the bride follow im- 
mediately, and after the vatire bridal 
party and special guests have paused 
out the other guests leave Music ie 
played until the church ts empty. 


at once destroys the pleasure of the . 


she makes the effort. Unobtrusively, - 


such kindness to be taken too casual - 


wT 


‘ 


\ 


‘ y 
‘ 


“Cont TeaT : 
Yos, sit, 
partly responsible, was the reply. 


You! Milda cried angrily, What 
has he done? ; 
He quiet my child. What ts the 


charge, Hiratn asked quietly: 

You see, sir, it was a cheque that I 
cashed for him, 
was forged, 

Whose cheque was it? Hiram. ask- 


ed, 
It 


It appears that it 


One. of "Mr. Crawley Brann’s. 
was for twenty pounds; but Mr. Brann 
sald that he only drew it for two 
pounds. The figurés had been clear- 
ly altered. L can only gay that I 
am Very sorry. I, myself, would 
never have made afussa about it. 1 
' always likei the young gentleman, 
ahd even now I eT: bring myself to 
thitk that he did f 

Do you know aity reason why Mr. 
Seymour should have had a cheque 
from Brann? tram asked of Hil- 
da 

None at all, 
one another. 


They hardly knew 
I can’t understand it. 
E am too svi | ered to think, 

Can you’ me anything more? 
Mr. Manager? Hiram askod * 

No, That's all I know, but I should 
like to. tell yer. young ladies that my 
sympathies are with Mr, Seymour, 
ety T can do anything to help him 
b will. 

Thank you, Hilda answered grate- 
fully. 

How did Mr, Brann take the,news 
of the forgery? Hiram asked qifietly. 
Was he very surprised? - 

No, only angry. But what do you 
mean? the Manager asked. 

Nothing at ‘present. The _ first 
thing is to go and see if we can’t ball 
him out. Next I want to interview 
Mr. Brann. Don’t worry, child. By 
this time tomorrow you will be laugh- 
ing at it as a joke. Mr, Manager, 


police statiun? 

With pleasure) sir, was the answer, 
that caused a grim smile to twitch at 
the corners of Hiram's mouth. 

When they spoke to the superin- 

tendent at the police ‘station they 
found that ball was out of the qués- 
tion. 
You see the charge is a very serious 
one; but of course, the prisoner will 
be. able to apply to toe magistrates 
tomorrow. 

I ere you will not object to my 
seeing the mer, as you cail him. 
t wish to arrange about the de- 
fence. 

In due covrse Hiram was admitted 
to the cell, and he was pleased to 
see that Vaughan was by no means 
dejected. In fact “he was. boiling 
with rage 

You dor don’t, know me, young sir. I 
atm Hiram {. Horner, of New York 


City. I have just come from your 
young lady, Miss Hilda Grant. Let 
me have a Jook at you. 


Hiram ‘stared at Vaughan for a mpo- 
ment, afid apparently he was satls- 
fied with his inspection, - 

You're all right. Now tell me your, 

~ 


story 
But T don't know you sir. Why, 
It’s 


should I? 

Please don't waste my time. 
valuable. I may as well tell you 
I amon the track of this Crawley 
Brann, and you'll ke doing me a good 
turn by helping me to trap him. 

Young prig, le muttered to himself. 
“This uitttde exporience will do him a 
world of good. © 

Now you can just tell me how you 
caine to have this cheque from Ww: 
ley Brann. Hiram continued aloud. 

‘Vaughan related what had taken 
place. When he haé finished Hiram 
continued his questions. 

Did you look at the. cheque when 
you got it? 

Not particularly. 1 just endorsed 
it and gave it to. the Manager to cash 


io olde" bested the bi 
pag eat ge” snill ryan hgee. 4 


I am afraid that 2 was 


do yow mind-taking me round to the 


tno refus 


Fort Rouge, Winnipe 
{mproved quartér or 

80 Horse Power aw 
good improved half section, 


western land, 


for me. 

Where's the money ~ now? 
you given it to Miss Grant? 

No, Lforgot all about it. I was call- 
ed suddenly to London. 

Is it In your pocket now? 

I have three five pound notes, but 1 
changed the fourth. You see, I did 
not expect to stay the night in town, 
and I am short of money, . I did not 
think it would matter if I changed 
one of the notes, for I had money here 
and would have made up the twenty 
pounds before I saw Hilda, he said 
eagerly. 

That is unfortunate. 
looks bad, 

Voughan’s face flushed angrily. 

Don’t be a young fqol, Hiram sald 
quietly. I believe your story alright, 
but I was looking at ft from the point 
of view of n jury, Your yarn sounds 
improbable. 

I can’t help that. 

I suppose pet, but it's none the less 
unfortunate. Anyhow, I am going to 
do the best I can you. Iwill wire, 
to my solicitor to bring down the best 
counsel. that mony can buy, and it 
strikes me that we will give Mr. 
Crawley Brann a pretty tough time of 
it. The puzzle to me fs that I can’ 
quite see what reason he had for get- 
ting -y you into’ trouble. Do you 

now? “or 


No, I. don’t»; I never liked him, 
but I have enly seen him once or 
twice, Vaughan answered, 

Hiram was deep in thought, 
suddenly “his. face brightened. 

I think I have got it, he anid excit- 
edly. Let me tell you right now 
that I think’t Is a good job that you 
have got me to look after you. If 
you hadn’t you'd be in the deuce of a 
mess. Goodnight, And don't be 
down-hearted. By the bye, any mes- 
sages? 

If you’ tell Miss Grant that. 

Lunderstand. I'll say it. muclp bet- 
ter than you can tell me. Look here, 
young féllow, I think this will do you 
a world af good, 

How? 

For one thing, ft will give you some- 
thing to write about, For another, 
it'll take some of the sfarch out of 
you, . Good-night. 

me 
CHAPTER XXIV 

Mr. Horner was quite enjoying him- 
self. 
such an exciting time since the fam- 
ous day when he had. set the corner 
stone to His fortune by defeating a 
Trust Inthe. New .York Stoek . Ex- 
change. 

His cheery presence gave hope to 
the three dejected women to whom 
he returned. He recounted all that 
he had learnt from Vaughan. 


Have 


In fact, ft 


and 


But Mr.. Brann did not owe meé 
twenty pounds, It was only two, Hib 
da broke in. 


phat ia just the devil of it, Of 
course he will say that he gave a 
cheque to Seymour for two pounds, 
and I must own that his tale is phe 
plausible. Mr, Brann is no fi 
ho. has laid his plans with great sare. 
but I think we'll defeat him. By the 
bye; I would very much like to know 
where tiat gentleman is at thes pre- 
sebt moment, After I’ve sent off 
a few telegrams I think I'll just have 
a look in at Sunnicote. 
here all right. 

Hiram ordered his car, ope he be ad 
that all was peace at e cottage. 
David Clay was awake, and Hiram 
saw him for a few minutes. 

J know whom you want me to tell 
you. about. She fs well. Let 
me give you-n friendly tip. - You are 
very, much. beiter tonight I can see 
that, but get well just as quickly as: 
you can, ll bring her out to see 
you tomorrow afternoon. 

Ther he leant ever and spoke very 
confidentially . 

I don’t see any yeasoll why we 
shouldn't have-a double wedding» Just 
remember that I've said that, and if 
we are of the same to-morrow 
night we'll fix it.up, and run down to 
Monte Carlo for our honeymoon, Why 
man, you look belter a y. 

There was no sign of* Crawley 
Brann, so he returned to the hotel, 
With great care ne ordered his din- 
ner and then went to the telephone, 

Mayfair, 872, please. Is there any 
delay? Good. In two or three min- 
utes be began to speak. 

Is that you, Myr. Wilson? 
Vilram K. Horner, 1 want you to 
come fo Bognor. ‘Youve got my 
wire? ‘That's right. Who's the hest 
counsel? You, criminal. 100. 
eas man, 1 don’t care if it isa ou- 
sand, wine iim down with you. 
iyne case is not a simple one, Pil 
get the heaiu; postponed ifll twelve. 
Geodnight, 

he dinner was dorved amt Hiram 
saw that it was eaten. 

No , appetiie, Miss Grant? You 
must eat, or what.will your young) 
j man say, if Ye sees you are pale to- 


vow 
“a looked at them with a genial 
smile. .° 

1 know what those beautiful eyes 
eve asking, Miss Stafford, 1 have 
seen him, and he's much better, J 
told. him that I would bring tu 
round tommorrow afternoon. Another 
but I in- 


nee of champagne? No, 

Miram’s ety for there was 
iim, a é'even ad ae te 

éd in gaint e as lis reward. — 
The two nee _ to bed, and nig 

am drew nis chair close to 

He looked at her auxione 


a wa 


cheeks. 
Hiryin, whe iqinianered. 
are splendid 
hac “a, he sald : om ate 
And--4 love you 
‘To be Continued) 


1 think 


‘EXCHANGES 


eg, 5 “chek titled tote gna somé Cash for wit or 
f section of western lan 
mobile and some clear thie lots and bask for, 


8 fully modern houses céntrally situated Aa Winnipeg well rented for 


Write vs for list of choice Winnipeg investments, also for booklet 
on fortunés made fn Winnipeg real ‘estate which -will MiVeeeet you, 
: + SCOTT, MILE A 660., 
22 Canada Life Bullding, 


f market. 


He felt that he had not had| 


aa th x 
: wi Pics “ont anata Bis tr Zor 
yy CaNe. 


Yil be back to 


T an, 


' MONUMENT TO WOMAN PIONEER 


faire Women ‘Will With Erect a Fitting 
Memorial,to Her Who Blazed the 

Way:to the Golden West =, 

At the beobnd afinual of the 

International Congress rm Wo- 


week of October, the ote was the 
betterment of country Ife, the lessen- 
ing of the burdens of the farmer's bated 
and mother, the ado of methods |. 
and devices that 1 conserve the 
sof the 


home, the country 
ral community. Tee speakers num- 
bered men ‘and women of note 
including Dr. John A. Widstoe, Hon, 
Martin Burrell, Mirze All Kull a 
Miss Alice Ravenhill, Dr. Liberty H. 
Bailey, Alexander Aaronsohn, ‘MYs.; 
John Harbert, Mrs. Albetia Kepper,’ 
Rev. ‘nw Brown .MeNuit 


Winnipeg, | Man NAS and the ru- 


Not the Same : 

Tinie was When hé had been an of: 
ficer Ih a srack’ regiment, But he 
had fallen on #vil days. Now he was 
compelled by force of ciroumstances 
to resign his commission, and énlist in 
another regiment as a humble ie 
He found it, however, very hard to 
forget his former position, and when 
he was requested by a sergeant to hold 
his horse he romarked: x 
Pr—you—er—forgéet, sergeant, that} > 
I once held his Majesty's commission, 
The sergeant joo’ at him in tlie 
cold and critical way that only ® ser- 
geant can, 

Did you, my. son? he asked. Well, 
you can just hold one of kis Mafes- 
ty’s horses now. 


Harbert 
dent, and re-elected Mrs, 
Burns, seeretary by acclaniation, Ok- 


eeting place. 

The closing session was keg hey ba 
the decision to raise a pioneer fw 
with which to erecta large Sanat 
in bronze to the first farm woman ot 
the golden west, 
‘shown of a farm women standing on 
a doorstep with one arm éncireline 
the neck of-her hopeful pre Reva her 


~ 


A Pill for All Seasons.—Winter and 
Biwis. in any latitude, whether in sree Sheen. Soe pe tarry Ie 


torrid zone or Arotic tem i 

Parmelee’s Vegetable Pills can be de- Mare to father, th due to return from 
pended upon to do thelr, work. a his day’s toflin the field, 

Syapeptio. will find them a friend..al-| pe of this paying -tri- 

ways.and should carry them with Lim] pure ha 7 ere eo -wonian who first | 


everywhere. They are made to. with- 
stand. any climate and are warranted 
to hay f sae Sve and en : end the 
They do not grow 6’ ‘a qua’ no , 
possessed in many pills now om the! {ne model desired. that hie mame. be} 
RT ae kept gecret until the soccmjteenaent 
: of his great work. 
Stranger—Could you help a poor! A committee was appointed to for- 
fellow whose wife and children ere! ther the of a fund of $150, 
thirsty? » | 000 within one year, comprising Miss 
Yones—Why are they thirsty? ps B. Mathews of Oklahoma City, 
Stranger—Why, we just got & case) Okla; Mrs: R. W. Gharles of ep 
of beer from &@ kind lady, but we ain't} ton, Man; ., and Mrs, John T, Burns of 
got nd money to buy a corkscrew, / Oilahoma City, Okla. ‘The Canadian 
see?) ' ogee dh started the. popalar sub- 
Minard’s Lintment Cures Diphthertla ora Sia at ‘of Subseription ta to urge 
iseyien a popular contrib’ to the fund in 
Owing tothe rapid growth of ven 4 cent payments. 6 organization 
ness in the city of Hdmonton Bont As the campaign in every 
freight offices of the Grand Trank Pa. sath be named by the committee’ 
cific thére have become © equate} at an early date. In the meantime 
heceanitating the wove whick ties just those -d mL of eng their 
pretenti mora. Ae-od. balla| Aire. FORA Te Hams Oblaheme ONS, 
ous quai +} Mrs ma City, 
fee will be devoted to. the Grand Trunk} Oida. 
Cartage and the various foremen for} A feature of ihe Dry- Farming pro- || 
the present at Ba peut, Sik oa the tie: 
S ERaEEnEEnEET was the fetiig os forbs exhii C) 
Deatnesr roe bo Cured \. plays made by the°farm women and 
by local. applicati ries the home economic societies were as 
yeech the sess, | much enjoyed by the visitors ‘as the 
is stitution * areas displays of farm products. 
dition ofthe incoun} the -week the Inte nal 
. When - = signs omen’s Press Association held 
. or| several meetings at which officers || 
>} were elected, and it was decided tol 
establish a state or provincial anil} 
;| fary in every. ‘state and province in 
jap North Ami and algo. to have re- 
“eountrt 


es 
This auxiliary: , organization, which i 
at Colorado Springs In, 1911 {| 
tare with i SON now aneiee 54, ie i 
"Eo, oO. 


for constipa- 


ainess 
rost 


fo its 
we be ares 


eee ee 
Livestock Means Success 
On nearly every farm livestock 
raising is merely a side line when it 
main thing.. There is} 
the ep head can mark- 
bic 


poeta 
@ mia} wi 
aes am at home in th 2 


no long hauls to’ tien are romecessary. 
Ifa farmer can f hk wl pay 


Paul, aueveharyabaneies:: 
re 
Billions of Matches 


as feeding it to ee ih 
me gene gi 


pougt and us: od earatiity, wad 
came toon a Httle sheaf! 


with a few seep ] “to |} 
with o Tor wiling hinge to 


the soil, as well-as a saving of ‘best of their time, were very cl 
in the hauling? resting pure- : ; t 
red livestock Js a business wae 
should be entered gradually ir 
ed from relu 
eommon stock a} ie 
lead up to the in 
There can exist no 


7 Def dl Pi ogy | 
a ] 
em Race ng pina match: | 
permanent sy: oh eh Sie place of that little shed |] 
of agriculture withont livestock and eat on the same spot there || 
on high-priced » pure-bred stock stands a huge faciory that tirns out 
is the only kind to have. ‘| Moreland’s * Mngland's Glory,” mateh- 
sestejanenipniteticeteen : s- at the rate of twelve million an | 
A man ean haye short legs and. stifkj hour... 
head high. The mate!) machine is real- 
sabe eee _ | the last ‘wont tt i machinery. Atter 
It always costs more to acquire « e ee s of timber have been cu 
erouch thah its worth. up into ‘splitits, the machine takes } 
{Dara Rots thei es the proper posi+ 
Vetween the toothache ‘ga the dent« them in 
ist 2 mau Js forced to choose between| “After that it just puts their heade 
two evils. mto the composition of which ihe 
d of-a match is made, diles them, 
“Ags * vermifage there is nothing so} and drops the finished matches, r 
potent as Mother Graves’ Worm Hx- posneee Prato boxes waiting to recelye 


terminator, and it can be given to the 

most delicate child without fear of a a single hour of the arfival 

injury to the constitation. of logs of timber from the wharf dhey’ 
- are cut up and converted into matches 

for the’.busy. housewlfe or the 

er. 

walk over the factory, which 


Lots of poor men are the architects] fr 
of other men’s riches, &mo! 


Nothing worries a nagging wife so} 
much as a husband who won't get 


f, takes over an hour, 
mad, Glor, 


5 


epatetee 
Minard’s Liniment Cures Distemper 
_ 7 od 


eens ccm aes 
y Demonstrating, 
Mrs. Pry--What is all that naise 
“ao house, Wille? 

iie—Ma told pa I was just like w 
him—always fightin’—and pa sald 


‘a amazing 
fiy years ago. 


“Out of 


Lots of discomfort — the : if. 
blues—and many serious |, ig be ope Toons! moa she wv 
_sicknesses you wit avoid i Bt aC ncpnrag ag eh 


u keep your bowels, Liver : 
fd seach in good Ol came lee afer his Jae re 


timely use. of es t 
im 


—- nie a ets Ca ee aeacmareshe 


men, held at Lethbridge the last| ou) 


Totes beet eee ee 


the railroad... So far no great amount 
of work has bee done and it is im- 
and pba gig that active operations _ will 
John | of claims have beca staked, however, 
and oe compan 
| railway factlties at hand they may be 

able to make a trial shipmetit in the 
lahoma City was chosen as the next {romediate future, 


A” model. was | NOtcnecessarily a hop: 


on held during the week |} 


seven acres and is being + : 


SLO NES SITET CIS FUP 


A 


Getting Along 
cnt ges see MOSH OME 


ag iteain— Wal Aesop's ‘4 


the read then. 


ea her {f° she 
When they first. came 


re won 


ts from the west state that 
‘excitement reigns at Kitselis on 
lime of the Grand Pacific 
th, finds of 


the real thing ways the report, ia es 


tablished beyond doubt; assays made} table, 
{ Yes Bit’? tsked the shabby waiter 


recently have run as high as $700 to 
the ton and quantities of the ore are 
to be found Within a’short distance of 


before the spring. Numbers 
pany thinks that with the 


Query—Is. a brite. “eeltpossessed 


after her father gives her away? 
A 


No, Cordelia; a = mama ts 


[== 


through an elevato: 
one run by an ele’ 
the leact fraction 
the farmer any bett 
loaded direct on ‘cars. 
ar the gs 

50 on a 


and she said | 


ford 


Why, urely 
My dear sir, you're not a ri 


a certainty, 


Two. old 
of each other 


claes. 
Te ‘i & 


—-— 


for years. 


risk. 
» You're 


Chflewe chuiits Jost sight 
One days 

p »own.-on: nie uae, worl. 
of face and clothes, entered a cheap 


eating honse and seated himself at a 


briskly. 


Th®n tho customer looked up and , 


to his amazement recopnized his olf 


ehum. 


Great Seott, man, he exclaimod. 


Fancy you having sunk to being a 


waiter and ina place like this, too 


The waiter 


turned up his nose. 


Yes, I'm a waiter, he replied sarcaz- 
tically but thank goodness I don’t ex: 


here, 


————., 
If you make a remark, don't you cn- 


Joy mAvIDE someone Bay: Is that so? 


vat a matt and wife are one ft is be- 


cause they are tied for frat place. 


1%c.. 


saved: eis ey ee ent or less, @ 


the grain is, but mostly on the 
wich the-pleeioe tor man taking it in. 
fat af 000 usiels. Wen 
car of 1, en 

ett oe 


minal elevator: 7 
under 


supe 
government welghmen ‘ 
fon Government Board of 


Loading Platfo: 
_ ‘above where the 
$60 of more on every ear he shipy. ~ 


a doact be, sede st ihe 


} for all grain ‘s unloaded from 
er the res ead oe -by sent ile Baber 
of the Domin 
rab 


eourse, it makes a adhe our loading of the ‘farmers’ 
grain whether {t has id shipped — caren’ an elevator or over the 
but ft can easily be seen from what we have stated 
r’s advantage atid when it saves him around ; 


eliotn cst 
set inaetig helene 
ushe 


three Riders. me for ave that is his very own. 
that he will without 
car at botany the ‘ 


We continue to act as. ap fem ony ia 


pas 


it. 


spay on how'dirty 
ding his own 
the phe yet 
er, or Bay 


rath thon 


cose? 


Arthur er Fort William. Netity Peter dunses 


= nea — oy ae 
The Loading Platform 


In thie writing We desiré,to put before ouk Western Farmers the 
saving and advantage:of loading grain direct on cars. Shipping grain ‘ 
itcmatters.not whethe: a Government clevator or * 
company or individual Owner, does not aad © 
@ cent to the value of the grain, nor does it give 4 


chance of marketing Jt to adVantage than when | 
But loading direct on ears cuts out in the first 


i 


" 


fe tacitities tor 5 
of the ion a trade, ire given us°a re- 


arene in. We make liberal advances 
rite us for shipping instructions and mark , 


re give ag references to ovr reliability. efficiency 


Canada 


“ro1-703 ¥ Grain Exchange. 


(2 


it matches een ‘although | ; 


“if we are x be oh 0 por 
inyestingnt. 


beet ean to 
to” she as 
a sh 


GRAIN GROWERS, itis all in your hands, 


; pe SS eee eG BE a 50, th & 
aes WwW: pital of $008,000" fon Frey one with @ pat A paid ip 


bn eadindes 
ita pdieiceg 


MERE cs LS ET TA AA BEY pn HEI 


, buy in 


[ Rosman Soe.§ Conran 


buyers, t 


coun 8 by 
ent oT you's ee 


Paral 


ge of elevators. 
ear loads on 


The Grain Growers’ 


nee hie 


ain 
Growe: ain 


_Winnlpeg, Canada. : 


et Sanat ' 
and fin al standing any clty or country Bank Manager {n Western ~ 


‘ . ’ : “ — te oe 
\ ° ¢ ‘ ‘ se . ‘ 


« 


bane PES eS ac : TIE REVIEW, SRL NT. "ALBERTA, aia pos 


mp lanai ir INFLAMMATORY RHEUMATISM. 


a ‘ 4 ¥ : es 
ow ‘ 


davaanes rare - 


’ 


The Etiquette of War MONKEY AND REAR’ FIGHT 4 SEED GRAIN AND’ POTATOES 


War—that {9 warfare between cly- parvent Marc’ 9 it a 
ged Datlona— chee ite code. ot. eti-| Stutal Exhibition inan Engiieh Town | Don’ | Diétribution From the Dominion Ex- 
. wr as.the Customs of War, |” le Stopped by Audiehos perimental Farms, “1912-1913 | Conquered ‘by GIN PILLS 
ah which are written, others tac-/ Am exolting scene occurred at a! By tnstractions of the ton, Mints {¢ St. W. G. Reid, Hamitton, Ont. writ ‘ 
agreed o. D pausto hall, in. Now| thé audience rose) ol Bowels ter of Agrioutture @ dtetr bution ‘at ““T haye been for the last two yale a 
ite aks oy ot fighting abe body’ and. protested, agginst the) . | Superior sorts of grain and potatoes } cripple with Musofilar and tiflatumatory 
< wiped — the rules which protest the} performance was described to the | Will be made during the coming win | Rheumatism. Ltried almost everything 
roee fing of the ambulance, and Scarborough magistrates yesterday) j ter and spring to Canadian farmers ino. wa to medical science and sought 
Rea the use of explosive, or within; When #ohn Hendrickapn, proprietor. of } ‘The samples for general distribution | 87g of climate without reliel. You 
; Will consist of spring wheat, 6 we inanager in this city recoaimended Gin 


White oats, 4 Tbs; barley, Fills and T have sinc pisken tight bores 
Welt’ Pease so Ths. These vf fthaa att: raat eer now’ cured. TT Goisider Gin 
out from Ottawa. A dletribution at; it, oy eaaaaer or of Rheumatisn and 
potatoes in 8 ib samples will be ear ney Sheena 


i te, @: ding’ bullets an ee een — er age for 
© general wm ear and a monkey, 
ant, enya sae apy Te wn efloge tat Monday ntgnt 


to subjection, A leader may out off| defendant | 106d at thé People’ 
hid enemy's.tuod..and water. supplies, [Palace and Aquarium what was des- 


“puna He may subject him to all the horrors | eribed as a fight betwoon the bear and |. mMéd on from 1 of. th if jp 50ee 8 boty6 for Zaso. Sample free 

‘bot ‘Usto Kuna 1 of tamine and-thirat; bat he must not the monkey. The latter had tied to Kemittal dorms, eh ag + ota} "hn at if you write National Dr: wand ( i val 

elements and serves as the potson his food or water Re 4 ite eck & Heavy welght, te Hae me Le — | Ottawa applying only the provinces} © OF Canada, Limhed, Tormnta, 13: 
uppone A ace eselged ani e rom moving easily; Headuche and Indigestion, « ne » | of Ontario and Quebec. All samples 

great source of our body-heat. MH | enat outside the walls are wells which : 


small black bear was dragged on to}: Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Pri . | WHI be sent free, by mall. 

the étage, evidently very much agninat) enuine he Si all Price Applicants must give particulars in 

and which the beselged can reach | its will. \ mum bear oignature |‘repgard to the sol)-on thelr farms, and 

under cover of night. The beséigers| 1 am now Introducing John John | . some aocdint of their experience with 

would be justified in sending parties | 80t, defendant told the audience. You" Zen Me such kinds.of grain (or potatoes) as 
. they have grown, &0 that a promising 


to fill up the wells with earth and| Will now seo a fight between binck and , 
‘stones, or to destroy.them with dyna-| White, Le then invited the: animals histatins sort. for thelr conditions may be se- 


Greater body-warmth means 
richer blood, more fat, not 
obesity but fat which the body 


the beselgers cannot effeétively hold, 


TRE ‘ALBERTA’ HOTEL 


715 MAIN ST., WINNIPEG 


A few deere eouth of C.P.R. Depot 


anite, On the oil” hand,-to pollute to feht, 3 leoted. Rat d 
ape » pawn coal for heat— Bl the wells with polson or to eg The monkey jamped upon the hears | Saal ina ties acer "| Back application must.be separate phigh neo? excep i 
's Emulsion does this. B| animals into chem, would be ‘an fn} badk and bit tt about the dyes. The) SHAW'S SCHOOLS: and must be signed by the applicant. Y Oadldaen: uibiectibe 
A ful after cach my ‘ boar a a a sont the Dhe Central Business College, ‘to-} Qnly one sample of grain and ane of puternice 
risoner of War hes his rights, | stage, but the defendan ARE tonto, with Four City Branoh Freee potatoes can be. sent to each farm. |F gist ang cold 
health “warm He bo asked to give his parole—-| forward again and a flerve struggle of} —~The Central. Telegraph and Railroad| Applications on any kind of printed Ore eater WHavery veer 
bay acess tte and to protiise ot 8 onclon} but op eauat woget yt pote! ere ensued owed and The Shaw Cofrespondenes forni cannot be accdpted. If two or ait pravtically Pieditie 
not be § n the ow for in tl 
makes all he cod foal ae raph 4a not to ie hatt's tor ee The bear freed. itself, bat the de.| “Shaw's Schools, pag: get came latter Dalgeene: wal be ‘ont: rr All Outside Rooms 
be Go so, A prisoner on parole who at-| fondant again brought it up. to the & great worl: ts bein done@ ia training As the: suppl¥.of seed is Hmited, 
: Pea escidiin to oe tempts ‘to e#cape ta Hable to be shot,/ scratch and a further Agbt took place: | young poople for business -pursults! farmers are advised to apply early: 
by raising endurance-power either when escaping or Mw retaken; The andience rose almost en masse/ @nd for earning good aalaries. ‘The uae the applications will not neceasar ~~ oe tia 
and. creating stre ngth alive... and protested against the Continuance | @nnual curriculum, is interesting and be Milled tu the exact order In ° 
; 4 An unparoled prisoner may also be| of pad a Aisgraceful exhibition aud saby} TS maflod trée on bonding request to foh they are received, Prefer- _ Everybody likes the 
Reject substitutes for SCOTT'S. shot whlle tn inthe act of escaping; tly the manager barred the per} W. IT. Shaw,. Prealdent, Toronto,| edce will alwapetbe given-to.the. ne 
Soott'& Bowne; Torento, Ontario 19-61' a if recaptured, {t would be murder tenn ce for tlie rest of the week, Ont. thoughtful and explicit requests. 
: to shoot lim, though he may be} Defendani told the magistrates that |. | pllcationa- received atten the end. vt ; 
tome oaetiand Pn aad A ton sa org Ee Ee 
S| ment, shown the : applications for grain (and ap Sy 
White Pine Culls Now in. Demand A prischer may be compeiled to} had played ea gg ite hy oe: : Dis Saturtay ‘aight? ae” Wie Vou) piMoations from the provinces of On: “The House of Plenty 
A Dieiilice Neatuve. of babrant fei ag Fina Geen yng y= af pin ig 1 98 and poh na rates Imposed a fine 0 . an een itn 7 yk rs be acdmeemnitoten for B atersa sore poses TORONTO’S . F ‘AMOUS 
: Cc 
tions of-ino North ta the’ exrrasea:| U8 caDiOrs, ABX of &, purely. muiltacy oto oe a a 
8 © oF @ Bobble ana’ he wa ay 
bigest arene Faun caveat yee : assist tn draining ey. camp. in which ANAEMIC GIRLS up ee the biggest problem he had | p , It otherwise addressed a HOTEL 
It takes tn Gale bo rabies thar SS * - ise orgrsral joe woe ho be} RYWHERE oe bad fe {eakle in ail the vast.ex- ¥ a Soeeoor ent may eeu. 
80 years ago they would’ have been |imeg Oe wedienustd ~ SEEM EVE bother Rede i any ‘thelr ’ should |] American and European 
considered refuse, fit only. for the eS custome of war justify th Bark gong on wiltle he fing at vate. é be eadreaned 1) asta repait) ‘to the ha 
- Fonghest kind of patching up of aheds,| pioyment of ot Pal Ml cori Nine Out of ‘Beas Ten Show! i¥ to bod? -‘That was the question Superintendent of the neargst Braso})  / S8?-: Wolebt, & Mask! Onerott 
hoe ren aus sien Feary a rales, at a soldier voluntar!} R { This Seri ae eet ye eS ye : Hxperimental Farm in. that ‘province. nia tathtn 
Reneteiee” a to build. w r, the other side aré. sutitied to to}. Symp oms 0 is rious htanter Bobbie, bs suddenly struck a 
Gee burner or used sein make sed six, and } alee au ° 
‘bonita opine Aye, Gn to tempt & soldier Yo betty hts ‘oe a Hey Trouble. to brother Gms to cowe ‘at chee CATTLE FATTEN QUICK. 
¢ ti a : th the den Bs Bt : ber: Sack came and tas lngged BR 
en 
teat ‘ie ton tompied, a'nian may pr sadly dove annonle wnterite | and th iy for two. or. three. momente sak it Talat faale oF 
ia fase tion ogee pitt ume nowt demanded Bot Saree 
. Te 
Mummie wae calied and aubjected} 
; ‘Nine women cut of ten 
i Saliba: wees. OF leek whe Ie to \ aera the game treatment, ex- due tho rer satan 
5 ra ist 0] Merny S 4 pales 68 neglect has allowed anac- fie otbte tenes: alg a, Nate Write f ron Gon ot wanes 
pa "of the lumber market of the er _, | usta to develop into hopeless decline. ' eighth aeaed ae 
Acoii OF Bourse, t triumpit struggling with sorrow In his} and even beyond the seas. ; rah 7 
ee nt ope wep ae ai mae ee ae or page ~ Bg ea dois ane Womens sia ed ee eomeet. nah : — tits paper nis par har ap 
for the lower grades of Be aah ig he at De, Wie Pink, Pills. for Pale| ing ont without: ie! Wage ee. A Matter of no importance 
active and large, 60. . : H ple. They “actually make the) greyn soap on your faces! » Little Kitty, with arms spread well 
Seg ee phe tar ee a A 
4 : waps tired” weakness; "a well out, was bending over a 6 of ; i i 
: I is not disguised continual backaches of anauila. Used according to direcilons, Dr. J.| paper, on which she made queer and MAPLE 
ket of © @ commis . ta ; a Grive away headaches, the low| 2. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial will|{uogical dots and marke. PR, . 
a how slogely the dusshee. trade | © im taba bie oh ts, the prinisenion. tf the over oo Apo mock ret te form of} Darling, eried her mother, as e.eheg 2 \ BUT TE { 
© province fs- connec 4 j eart an e fits of nervous : came into the dining-room and fo! . 
that of this country, the same require-| °*.? that mark the women whoxe| Steck manifests tiself-no time should) the curly head so low over its task, “All grocere 250, Ib. Tin 
ments for cult tnmber—_pamely; for ft men to} weak blood is unable to hourish their | be lost in seeking the ald of the Cord-| whet are you doing? - 
Dox manufactire—prevailing in that off your opponent's gen-| wagting frames, Dr. Williams’ Pink} {a}. It will act tmmediately on the] On, just writing to my friend, Lillie 
province as in the northern part otf though every. effort may be made) pitis have given health to unhappy | Stomach aud Intestines and allay the| smith! answered Kitty quietly, and 
is ag ae: we a Ti way te a tl earktoe ded anaemles in canes too Buuperons to pn ape bean omge the pig ae Ee ill} resumed her wayward scratches. . ‘ : 
unm! oO! aati mbar 2 ;: Miss 2 of the truth o: loleod “ ; 
ge ell SP relia eos vptrposee ould. be, aia Hattie 2. “Wate, “Witehs i, Ont, | Ravertione. wtlahe catned “ag eagaont ti” dates If your. Clothier,does ‘not sell 
earload has) says:-—'Scme two years ago I became ce scrawled i ae a3 apna Heat <i Bee! 
more than senianes signifi Pree? yery much run down, I conaulied aj A tof -| Then ot tesuy eas i, tr = 
means that anything in the shape of ia eal " @ victorious foe ts entitled doctor who told me that it was a bad acti no obey story -of & phil: with ag much ty eal, in a yoite 
a tree or log is being utilized in the rea Told. an ha sagt y and 5 Men case of anaemia*and nervousness. I| coal m town who presented each | as had her Httle daughter: 
way ot sawed product, and that tim- oe: eaten: ‘them would be sae net ede symptoms that accom-| houseliold with a ulce new thermom-| But, dearest, you don’ t know. how 
iaiy" 4. — ete: considered pasbie vandal y : le, stich as headaches, | otér and told the people the necessity | to write, do you? 
: é or ei ‘ner being ‘ When ri chieekee te te wpe - the: da. : of maintaining. per temperature, No, ‘mumule, replied the smail 
actually i. » The doctor's medicine dk When malting bis rounds one day he| scribe, as she glanced round pityingly ‘ 
anders thea: g00d stock.—American | Vader ee inhabitants to observed hts thermometer hanging in| at her parent. But what does that 
Bs -aigiee ; Beet talact faceine “vor fied Sting om: i woe ae Ss the ream = me en ‘ matter? Priliie Smith can't read. 
— . Pag De ¥ . man 0 10) £ | oteententetieennntgeenemmnteedl = 
: aay | ar tds at the suggestion of my moth- bored, his “ineructions, Minard'e Liniment Cures Colds, Ac. e 
§ .. Indeed, sir, i, : SE aE EEE 
: ectded “ I do, ee Made % Waaiee 6 
: "The traveller was wali af the : . : 
x . aie Lag aes 2 —< N -he was |" me pee ss 
aS . ‘ ud 2 y . = 
wnt 6 $08 whieh the ted ofa hel page I VERIBRITE VENOILT es 
vanyed oles why. a 70 deg the x Rap tag ree railway ey : 
. rane the ntr of one! < tree. ne on the . 
: platform, and wtood at at THE worLo’s pret woop’ 
‘ . : bg Pills, aro a cure} when it gets too high I take it di tention, 
+ epped ashore from the troop- es en scsi ot brison) fo gtr and. can recommend | and put {t outside until {t cools on A momeut later a locomotive flash |} Olegns and Peaoeysscl everything 
stip st Soatatpton his cousin Tim-| $38 execution of an eatal number of ‘gold by all a videiue de or by ; roid dalle 4 By o map lt tage Nemes Sree ie setar te wrt 
Stepped up to, meet: im Bota BF = a aN re gail. anediclue Séalernior by | tho “average” vowan Knows more| the window, of. the joa ata, en 
pe Nips wet eet remark bigs: ; sth ass tor “BO, mn The 5 Williams? about ‘her nelehbor than she: news was } a k i. a : dust Hardwi oors, i 
en a xine buck from ie on ae aug i Medioine ride Brock tlle, Ont, about /Merpeit. : Bae “The traveller matrelad great and M er 6 new 
ef gad) ) ust s ofthe o aigibteenctibeectatls ingutred of the statlo: 
ined and Sige fc sid Sarr of the Glas: Matter of Taste Po ed do you roll your em meaning of the strange scene he had Meas by peageaee 7 not latest, 
ane He ee e hare 2 ot gwen | | Nelson Well, oud clnpple, 1, must bbe ipa plod the official, va DOMESTIC SPECIALTY CO. Ltd. | 
a. of| take some exercise, you we ‘|p 2. Hamilton, Ce RF. # 5 
thou TE whe ae thie eee m8 of buy the oR aeee RUE Ing 1 4 SEL? wil i 
rofl: — : : F 
The Cheery Ad. M George Square a . - “Then the traveller went mad and Cir Eig yg F 
New M ery mad Pe po him suepiciously. and at last ap-| ing out together ik nite Aerie 5 ee : promptly bought # station saudwichs| | --) When Papa Sleeps — 
would you navise? ONfe bed better tak chro whol yo're | eee eens ® te tired ot tt, Onell a “peg ee ee Se Very Evident edie tena g 
nchlvertising, Man--That depends on! gai" ) porate an Mags athe A meat : An. 01d bon-vivant whoképt w ne} Naver inakes » Bit Of opine * 
ow many’ “ot -customers’ yOur “ ly decorated: contectiones’ Pp. : . wy. 
~ store floor, sustain, ‘You would What am I déing? inqalred ‘Toole, Look. darling, he whispered gushingly, wo dens Ui dea i ‘G establishment ean @ visit from Dis still as he can be. 
not want ‘em to break through into| @24.added with  merry.wink, why,|] ean seo your beautiful sweet, face on ete We Hoyt 
the cellar, of course, Tm not even whistiing. guile clearly -ta-eeat- windows. ae y Si t 
: i te en a oat’ veplied. the Glaswegian in sol-|~ But she was determined ou soaking A pee at Pe wi tana maken. 10h, . 
Shs man wht hans emi ‘und reproving tones; but ye're|@ change. ‘Phat’s all right, Geo ny time marks Lippincott’s, 8 “a pea Jou : 
hid write can kiaeree a, hologram of ot| looking almost as happy as if it Were| about my sweet face, sho sald, coldly: tavor-he-\eh Des ea glimpse of his). Wond'ring what's t 
ot Vm tired of hearing about it,’ 1 wish at CS snow : gh Tat 
vd ight aye ‘ad he's a depend} GRE RENT eta you'd remember my sweet tooth nov You're the first noe au Pigit he gives-a growl 
able sort of a Kidh i ian ‘a And then Instead. Pri dclcaay ever Hat foot n tlt ma ge here eens So sir 
ae . oo + ~ Foutare discharged gay, y ’ Andrew Carnegie telis’a tale=about ymreek: 8 os “pal Why ~ lace ia | 1 of cob: ‘Then he'll gréau ‘aud imble. 5 . | 
‘ : p Pee oking i Hi fl mncier ot) ee ‘ me Wobder it if pa’a broke fete 
ee ag : Agen : Bey ne : EES) Die a ke wena 18 TAI bia ew Grand Erunk Pecitie Or been sont eset 
» ; Seren Ini eg el in dmon\ ristem | “gpact I'd better hay a ; 
ss ‘ agen nk | ong oe au PReeungn’ Ane on chig s aia eae alter sir soma ds slacdonald the ert wake 4 ‘ae : 
' . ini : t little astonished to see. yy they anadian eeman . é 
: : 7S a gees ¥ upon that roaring cataract vith 2 : ph P adel mprafh st Finan <7 er9 priiea) sey All young widows axe not uigry, ~) 
igh 2 ‘i ad o eter ig charged me witt us-| out evince the faintest emotion. ~ “mie allel orcas tpn : ee peeve but some of them will be if the ; 
gi : in the as peters 3 none Saat te Finally, cree it Be hee 9 at : hd from Garth at the close of the elght-| #8y yes, before leap year ends, ; 
: vai eenth century and. esta! i : ; = 


, start¥ you coughis a ay ; ¥. Le © || is today @ thriving city of 68, 
baie ut fo : 4 ed: : * "8 fore the Hudson's Bay Com ates 
Ca pg te ee teeny Thoin 

vi 
ot? asked the mised ms! 
+ that gigantic body of witer 

over that lofty 9: ccipice. 

from the fatherland 
9 ial then 


Wat's to hinder 1 it eopey 


ave says toa wide mane st Say TTS ae ty an wh “it ie situated 
ero ole wane ie the histery oheacaeaid Dom{n- 


< 


ee ee ee ae 


t. void ran 
Bs PI wumember iy 


| praised "to the sities. . Epewatin se 


Ss 


ey. as. , agama cn Tey — oye Sena satan ah th wy 


THE IMPERIAL BAN BANK OF CANADA. 


eee ceeemibrnrern see err 


the Odd Fellows ‘wall hold no 
meoting but. aw special, meeting Ww: i HATCHER, Publisher, 


“SUPREME” 


Capital Subseribed = « . « $6,425,000 


will he held next Thursday | Subscription  $1.50,Per Year 

Capital paidup - .- + $6,425,000 ate SRE Advertising PONG ‘on Appticaton 
Reserve. - : . - $6,425,000 
Total assets - + - | - $72,000,000 ar L. O U R DR. E. W. BROWN FRIDAY, DBO. 20, 191. 

#bAD OFFICE: TORONTO ° Physidian and Surgeon Fm een 

RD @ WILKIR, President 3 ; HON, ROBT, JAFFRAY, Vice-Pres. « REDCLIFF. . . ....... ALRERTAL@ 
so > ea ern maacer “Modo by the tort Bxperienced Millers in the ‘Telephone 22. Y 
BAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT 


most modern mill. 


Deposita of $1.00 ~ upwards received and interest ‘allowed from. date of 
Deposit. 
Drafts and Money Orders Issued. 


Redcliff Branch - R. G. WILKINSON, Manager 


| WATCH REDCLIEF GROW 


6,000 PEOPLE IN 1913 


The local telephone mannge- 
ment wishes to sny that the 
operator is only expected to bor 
on duty Sundays from 2 p. m. 
todp.m, and that commence: 
mg noxt Sunday the above 
hours will be observed. This is 
not a rule of the localman- 
agement butis the hours fixed 
{oy the provincial management. 


0. f. LANGE 
a MUNICIPAL ENGINE 


Sewage, Gas and Water 
Supplies 
Street Grading, Industrial Spur 
Railways, ete. 
Plans _ Specifications for Houses 
‘actory Buildings. 
“qiaadennaanes: 
Layout of Parks, 
All Kinds of Pe oa Construc- 


We. fell it on its Merits. 


. 
Brings joy to every housewife Who uses it. Try it and be 
convinced. 


MADE BY THE 


Redcliff Mill & Elevator 
- Co., Limited 


REDCLIFF t 2 : : : ALBERTA 


Mi. M. B. Broom, of Minne- 
upélis, who hasbeen the guest 
of Mr. and Mrs. Pl-M. Pearce 
for the past two or. three 
weeks, is thinking seriously of 


' The Crown Lumber Company, Lim- 
iteed have purchased a site for a lum- 
ber yard and will invest,$25,000 in 
bulidings, etc. 

A large company has purchased 40 
lots and will erect 20 dwelling houses 
on same. : 

Another bulider has purchased 20 
lots and will erect ten dwelling houses. 


‘oarecoenamrssrisi 
Five More Large Store Build- 
Ings to be Erected 
1 Immediately. 
Te, 
Also Large Apartment 
tye | 


All. this is as ocean of what the 
‘rise one thik akthe stability of Redcliff. 
It is being builded on the most solid_prin- 
ciples of any town in Western Canada. It 
pale gems Na cag ig you to in- 
vest your money, — 

umeResmeenceeee 


Redcliff is Not Booming but is 
GROWIG MIGHTY FAST 


Motto: First- Pet erepcesiaie ser- 
vice for reasonable prices. 
Office:—Opposite Redcliff Hotel, 
REDCLIFF, ALTA. 


pleased with the town and, be- 
lieves she has a bright future, 


A Church of England service 
will be held this coming Sun- 
day night. The. service will 
commence at 7:30 instend of 8 
o'clock, 


eee is ay , E. BARTLETT 
Redcliff Brick and iad, BAS.” DEALS 


Dominion and Albeita Land 
Co., Limited gti sh ga 
Manufacturers of 


” 


Tuesday night being Christ- 
mas eve theSons of England 
will hold their meeting on 
Monday evening, December 
23rd, ‘ 


Ne eres 
IMPERIAL BANK RUILDINO, 
MEDICINE HAT 
Phone 420, 


Wire Cut Building Brick, Fancy Pressed Brick, in different 
Shades, and Hollow Brick. 


Pieass Carry Small Parcels and Shop Early, at. 

Ss’ , 
‘The Broadwa vay § Store 
i . KK ; Spo sons, wnt ter 
Community Silver- Sait, istic Porks, rut 
~ Spoons, insets or sold s soparat wly. 


¥., cut; Salt and Peppor Shakers, & 
aSS~= zie Diskes Fruit Bowls, Water Jus? with 
Tumblers to match, and many other artices. 
%, Telephone 


: In. beautiful mak wive | 
CEE GRO Ee Carving Sets eant2, bee Parse siete, ty tate 


ALBERTA — 
ORNAMENTAL IRON CO. 


Miners and Shippers 
of Coal 


a 


Our tiodern and complete plant, together with our high-grade raw @>| 
? material, ensures quick fulfillment of all orders with the ’ 
highest grade prodnet ‘made. Give us 
a.chance to quote on your 


requirements. 


box down to 25 cents. 
A Fine Line of Childrens’ Toys 


|] Cement Sidewalks and All 
Concrete Work. 


; . * j J. H. GIBBS coseeline eee ae gi ava, 
‘and the Momentum Increasing Daily cede uabaiacah ORNAMENTAL IRON Fruits and Vegetables for Xmas Dinner 
| resnanm a een > WBE Galea srmer Rese*tet oes Pia ind, 
; Sewers, ee Grading : Eng teh wali nate 6 Figs, Iparnina, Cant Phos Spanish Onions an "i 
We. Ore Agony yee 8, Rosen: Large wisi taba choos Fire Escapes ae Deliveri gal Remuent Will 
Fire Insurance Companies. Iingpourr, ~ ALTA: | Dally  Gallfor Ordors” 
ernie: —————— FOUNDRY WORK OF ALL KINDS | = The Broadway Store | 
Redcliff Realty Company Pall me Wentey. | kt MASTERS , | iia : 
Limited SUITS and 


OVERCOATS Cleaner and Presser 


REDCLIFF, ALBERTA. Ladies’ and Gentiemen’s . ; . 
From $1 5 Up - KEATS’ No. 41. rinse trot 


No, “ cae street, 


‘ Coats, Suits and Overcoats Bakery and Grocery 
Now Ready for Business Bakery ane = Groceries 


Atlas Lumber 


- RIESER 


maf | : Company Ltd. Ladies’ and Gents’ Tailor Across the Street from the ‘WEDDING ¢ AKES' 
| REDCLI F F ’ ty ’ REDCLIFF, ALTA. 7 Redcllff st a cle 


— : CHRISTMAS, BIRTHDAY 
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in And All Fancy Oakes Made to Order 


. 


"THE MERCHANTS BANK OF CANADA 


This Fine New Hotel Now Lumber, Lath, Lime, : : > 39 
Open. Splendid accom- Shingles, Plaste: ‘THE PIDZZ2 8 K OF WESTER CANADA. rue 
fie tion for M Established 1864, 190 Branches In Oanada ok BR 2 EAD 
suens ouldings. | x actesoeineemacnamas 
re anes Capital paid up = - = > 96,000,000 . HOME seach Sea Franek, Rye, Graham and 
Everything up-to-date Bar ~— ss Reservefund  -" + - — $5,400,000 


supplied with the best 


BATES: $3.00. PER. DAY 
Firet-clasa livery in connection, 


Sir H. MorTacu ALLEN, C.'¥. O. + + Presidewt | 
RY. Hepes se ht General Manager 


— 


McLACHLAN 
& McLEAN 


7 _ onoborkres “ 


ene i the omy, 


| SAVINGS DEPARTMENT 
Ww attention to Abecounts. Oue Dollar 
CARPENTERS AND Bia eee conn preity te Bank 
BUILDERS .. . PA secearna a wine of Pass. 
iz 2 : 


D. Broadfoot 
. MANAGER 


comme 
All Orders Promptly and Oarefully Attended to. 


ee ee 
‘ 


~ 


Woeanisday being Christmas THE REDCLIFE REVIEW 


locating here and:going into - 
business. He is. very — well. 


Bon-bon Boxes-=ititishstetechoosacy'sai = 


= /.